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Oct. 29, 2021 - America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes
02:41:57
America First with Nicholas J Fuentes Ep. 903America First with Nicholas J Fuentes Ep. 903
Participants
Main voices
n
nick fuentes
02:11:17
Appearances
Clips
a
alex jones
00:05
d
donald j trump
00:20
| Copy link to current segment

Speaker Time Text
unidentified
Thank you.
He's not interested.
nick fuentes
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it.
You're an e-girl.
You know the rule.
No e-girls.
Who's got the clip?
No e-girls.
unidentified
Never!
nick fuentes
Hashtag never e-girls.
Not even once.
unidentified
I've never heard of Nick.
What is that?
Americanism, not globalism.
We'll be our freedom.
I've never heard of Nick once.
Who's that?
Thank you.
It's the kingdom.
It's the kingdom.
And the power.
And the power.
And the glory.
And the glory.
Forever.
Forever.
It's the kingdom.
It's the kingdom.
And the power.
And the power.
And the glory.
And the glory.
Forever Forever Forever Forever
Thank you.
Wall. Wall.
Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall.
Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. America first is inevitable.
It's unstoppable.
And the reason why is because it's not cool to shill for big business.
It's not.
It's good to share what is real.
It's not.
It's hate.
How you get so much paper on your side?
Except the man just wants to save you, I reply.
I should look that neighbor, not to fly.
I'm a guy.
That's all I got.
It's like the kind of riders in the dark.
People come to know they get my heart.
And I'm up with you locked up on the yard.
You can still be anything you want to be.
One from one to four to one to three.
Thirteen from limit gather in the destiny.
Be the new commander and the chief.
That's the key.
I fear and love.
When you remove the fear and love of God, you create fear and love of everything else.
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God.
Jesus has won victory.
Bro.
You talking to somebody right now that only fears God.
You talking to somebody right now.
This is a Christmas magic.
This is a miracle.
Come on, man.
This is the free man talking.
This is the free man talking.
This is the free man talking.
This is the free man talking.
Thank you.
I stop playing games.
and at any moment I can check that yay button I think it's the worst okay
not my words not my rules I just endorse them alright
I just endorse them I just endorse them I just endorse them I just endorse them I just endorse them Everything.
nick fuentes
Warming up.
Everybody dare to vote.
unidentified
All right.
donald j trump
They didn't have a lot of money.
unidentified
They didn't have a lot of luck.
But they had grit.
And they had faith.
donald j trump
And they had courage.
unidentified
And they had each other.
Right?
But they all had one thing in common.
They loved their families.
They loved their country.
and they love their God.
Our beautiful ancestors won two world wars, defeated communism, and put a man on the face of the moon.
We are calling for a great reawakening of America, a resurgence of confidence, and a rebirth of patriotism, prosperity, and pride.
And we are returning to the wisdom of our founders.
donald j trump
We assembled here today are issuing a new decree to be heard in every city, in every foreign capital, and in every hall of power.
unidentified
From this day forward, A new vision will govern our land.
From this day forward, it's going to be only America First!
America first. USA! USA!
alex jones
USA! USA! It's the kingdom.
unidentified
It's the kingdom.
And the power.
And the power.
And the glory.
And the glory.
Forever.
Forever.
donald j trump
It's the kingdom.
unidentified
It's the kingdom.
And the power.
And the power.
And the glory.
And the glory.
Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever. Forever.
donald j trump
We're standing on the shoulders of great American patriots.
unidentified
This is a Christian nation.
This is America.
I fear and love God.
When you remove the fear and love of God, you create the fear and love of everything else.
You're talking to somebody right now that only He fears God and Jesus has won the victory.
Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro.
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back.
It's going to be only America first.
America first.
The American people will come first once again.
With respect, the respect that we deserve.
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first.
America first.
Thank you.
nick fuentes
Good evening, everybody.
You are watching America First.
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes.
We have a great show for you tonight.
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Thursday.
We have a lot to talk about, lots to get into tonight.
Our featured stories about the New York City vaccine mandate, and in particular, very, very interesting news.
I don't know if I want to say exciting quite yet.
But there's been a huge uproar among public sector union workers about one of the strictest vaccine mandates in the country which is being enforced in New York City.
And there was a massive protest today outside the Mayor Bill de Blasio's mansion by firefighters, police officers, and other city workers.
This comes as the New York City vaccine mandate deadline approaches next week.
And once that deadline hits, lots of city workers, thousands of them who did not get vaccinated ...may be terminated or placed on unpaid leave if they don't comply within the next few days.
So we'll talk about the situation there.
It looks, honestly, somewhat similar to what happened in Chicago and elsewhere in America.
We've seen similar protests like this specifically from union workers in the major cities, in the cities where these VAX mandates are being enforced.
unidentified
But it's, um, you know, it's...
nick fuentes
I don't know if I want to say I'm optimistic but obviously this is a positive development.
Unfortunately, this vaccine mandate has come down for some public sector workers sooner than others and what they say is that when the other deadlines went into effect basically people just got the vaccine at the last minute.
When they were really faced with the decision about whether or not they wanted to be fired from their job over it, they just wound up getting the vaccine.
And so some types of jobs that required the vaccine mandate or that were required to be vaccinated earlier, there was some hesitancy, there were holdouts, there were people reluctant to get vaccinated, but by the time the vaccine deadline went into effect, they had like 95% vaccination.
So hopefully something similar doesn't happen there.
I fear it will, but we'll talk about that.
That'll be our main story.
We'll also be talking tonight about Meta, which is the new name for Facebook.
And in case people don't know, this is something that was actually teased last week, or might have been even the beginning of this week.
I don't remember exactly when they first started talking about this, but Was either last week or earlier this week there were these leaked memos reporting that Facebook would undergo a major rebrand and name change as soon as this week.
It was announced today and the new name for the Facebook company, not the app, not the Facebook platform, but for the company which owns many social media platforms, the new name is Meta.
And if you don't know, Meta is supposed to be a reference to the Metaverse, which we'll explain on the show tonight.
It's kind of a new interesting concept.
But this is very similar to Google.
If you don't know, Google renamed their company Alphabet.
I think it was six years ago.
So if you go on the New York Stock Exchange, as an example, you won't see Google, but you will see Alphabet.
And Alphabet, they're two Alphabet companies.
They're the parent company of Google and all the other Google products, family of Google-owned companies, apps, projects, things like that.
And so Facebook has done something similar.
In order to rebrand away from their strictly social media platform called Facebook, they changed the name to Meta.
And that's supposed to be broader to encapsulate all their products as well as some new things that they're doing with the metaverse.
So we'll talk about that too.
Very interesting.
Very interesting what that bodes for the future.
Some people are not... maybe don't even understand the importance of this.
They don't understand the significance of this.
We'll get into it.
I don't want to rush into it right away.
But a lot of people look at this name change and they hear about this metaverse and I see a lot of people are rolling their eyes and saying yeah okay metaverse which if you don't know is sort of like a form of augmented reality it's sort of like trying to fuse the digital world with the real world and that'll largely be achieved not just through smartphones but also through potentially augmented or virtual reality glasses and other devices
Smart devices in your home, vehicle, work, etc.
A lot of people look at this and they say, oh that's a flash in the pan.
But, you know, if Mark Zuckerberg thinks this is the future, he's one of the richest men in the world.
And if you don't know this, he owns four out of five of the biggest social media platforms in the world by their user base.
Four out of five of the biggest Social media platform by user base in the world, he owns all of them.
Facebook owns all of them.
So if he says that's the future, I'm inclined to believe he knows what he's talking about.
So, we'll get into that.
It should be a pretty good show.
It's kind of interesting, kind of interesting stuff.
The meta thing's a nice change of pace.
Vaccine mandate is kind of more of the same, but...
Before we get into that, I just want to remind you to follow me on this channel if you haven't already.
Cozy.tv slash Nick.
Click the follow button right here.
Right here.
I think it should be here.
Under the video player.
So follow me here if you want to get push notifications on Telegram whenever the show goes live.
That's what that does.
And stay tuned.
Tomorrow we'll be announcing three brand new streamers on Cozy.tv.
Very excited about that.
We actually only have two!
I messed up the schedule and I thought one was coming on this weekend.
Actually, they're coming on next weekend.
So now I gotta find a third person.
But anyway, so I'll have to figure that out.
We have some new streamers coming this weekend.
We'll be announcing those tomorrow.
Their channels will go live this weekend.
Some familiar faces.
And remember to follow all our other existing streamers.
We got three new streamers this week, which includes Steve Franson, Jimbo Zoomer, and Joe the Boomer.
Steve Franson's show returns again on Saturday, in case you missed it last week.
It's called Hoedown.
He does it every Saturday.
Jimbo and Joe the Boomer, they stream almost daily, but make sure you're following them too.
A lot of good content, as well as everybody else.
Let me think, what else do we have?
Did I say Gab and Telegram?
Yeah, follow me on Gab, follow me on Telegram in case you haven't already.
Lots of good stuff coming your way on there.
Go to our merch store, Last Chance, merch.nicholasjfuentes.com.
We have our Halloween merch, which is going to be taken off the site at the end of this month, which is Monday.
So it's a last chance this weekend to get the Halloween merch.
I told you I'll be sporting one of the new hoodies tomorrow.
I'm not telling you to wait, but if you're indecisive, if you haven't decided if you want to buy the merch yet, maybe you wait and see.
You know, maybe you wait and see the show tomorrow, and you watch the show, and I'm wearing the new shirt, and depending on how I look in it, maybe you make a decision whether or not to buy it.
You know, you can see me wearing it, and then you can picture yourself wearing it, and you say, You know, can I picture myself wearing that?
Will I look good in that?
And then you call it.
You know, then you gotta make a call.
But this is the last call for the Halloween merch, and then it's gone.
I've been telling you, we're not bringing it back.
It's dead.
It's over.
You're never gonna be able to buy this stuff ever again.
So keep that in mind.
I don't want you to have any FOMO and buy it.
Now, if that's the last thing I would want is to create this FOMO-like sensation where you're afraid of missing out on merch that's never going to come back, so you buy it.
But if there's even a 1% chance that you want it, just consider you'll never have the opportunity to buy it again.
So even if you have the slightest inkling of, you know, I like that shirt, I like that design, all I'm saying is consider you'll never be able to get it again after Monday.
So, again, I don't want anybody to FOMO buy the merch, but if there's even a 1% inclination that you want to buy it, just consider this is your only opportunity.
And then the moment has passed, it's over.
You can never go back.
You've made your decision, now you have to live with it.
And you'll see your friends with the new merch.
You'll see your Groyper friends, you'll see your Twitter friends, they'll be wearing the new Halloween stuff, and maybe you'll think, oh I wish I bought that.
Well, yeah, unfortunately you can't go back in time.
That's the thing about time, it goes forward, not backward.
So anyway, merch.nicholasjfunces.com, last call.
We also have the hat restocked.
We have our I Will Not Comply anti-vax t-shirt, which is kind of becoming a symbol of a generation.
People wear this And they're defiantly standing up to the vaccine mandate, so check that out.
I think that's all of our announcements, so we'll just dive right into the show, I guess, because there's a lot to talk about.
I'm actually kind of eager to talk about Metaverse, because I got a lot to say about it.
And we actually haven't talked... I don't think we've done a technology story on the show in a long time.
You know, mostly over the past year we've covered 1.6, And the COVID vax mandate, obviously, and the ongoing pandemic and government response.
We haven't really talked, really, about much else.
And when we do, it's a rarity.
We talk a little bit about crime or these illegal immigration caravans and some other things, but I'm excited to talk about this Facebook thing because this is a real game changer.
And in case you missed it today, there was chatter about this, I think, earlier this week or last week.
There were reports that Facebook, which you know as the platform, the app, but it's actually a very large company, one of the biggest companies in the world, run by Mark Zuckerberg, there was chatter that they were going to change their name and they were going to rebrand the whole company.
And the reason they were going to do that is because Facebook, the company, is now much larger than Facebook, the app, Facebook, the platform.
In case you don't know, Facebook, formerly known the company, they own not just Facebook, the social media platform, but they also own Instagram, they own WhatsApp, and they have Facebook Messenger, which is now just called Messenger.
And these four apps are four of the biggest social media companies in the world.
They're all in the top five by user base.
Facebook has 2.8 billion users, WhatsApp has 2 billion, Messenger 1.3, Instagram 1.3 billion.
So they have a whole family of platforms and apps and of course they own other things too.
And now they want to get into something called the metaverse.
They say they're now actually dividing the company really into almost two parts.
They've got all the things that Facebook is known for now, which I just listed.
They say that's their family of products, their family of social media apps, and that's just supposed to be one half or one part of the company.
And part of the rebrand is to change the company obviously to not just represent one of those products but all of them and also changing it to reflect this whole new part of their business, this new venture which they anticipate apparently will be equally sized or maybe even bigger than everything we know about Facebook now and that's called the Metaverse.
Which we'll explain.
And so, they changed the name to Meta.
And now it's announced today, the stock name is going to change, the company name has changed.
If you go on Wikipedia, it's already changed.
It's now called Meta.
So Meta is the parent company which now owns Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram, Messenger, and apparently now is going to own all these other new products which are going to be Metaverse related.
And like I said at the top of the show, this is very similar to what Google did six years ago.
They changed their name to Alphabet and it hasn't really caught on.
I don't know anybody that calls it Alphabet.
Everybody still calls it Google.
And that's probably because, like Facebook, Google has become ubiquitous, and even the name Google, which is a trademark, has become synonymous with search engine.
You know, when you say you want to search something on a web browser, you say, oh, well, Google that, you know.
Why don't you Google it, right?
And as the biggest search engine, and maybe search engine and browser being one of the biggest components of the Internet, they can't really get away from it, but technically, if you go on the Stock Exchange, You've got Alphabet One and Alphabet Two.
Or what is it?
Alphabet A and Alphabet B. But there's technically two companies.
They're both called Alphabet and it's a parent conglomerate for many different projects and companies.
And so Facebook is following suit.
And really, that's how we have to think about these companies.
You know, I've said this for a long time, I don't know if a lot of people even realize this, because we talk about Silicon Valley, we talk about big tech, and I think some people may have a consciousness of this, I think some people are cognizant of this fact, but maybe a lot of people don't even think this way.
And, you know, forgive me if you've heard this before, I think I said this last week, But bear in mind, the social media companies are not just some of the most influential companies because of the nature of what they do.
And we're talking specifically about Apple, Alphabet, Facebook, Amazon, one of the other big ones, Twitter, I'm trying to think.
There's an acronym for all of them, but in short, when we talk about those companies, you know the ones I'm talking about, Microsoft.
When we're talking about big tech, I should say not just social media, but big tech companies, you know, we throw those terms around loosely and we know that they're powerful, again, because of the business that they're in, which is to say that they preside over this global network, a global conversation.
You know Facebook is just one product of this new meta company.
Facebook is just one company under the formerly Facebook company and yet the Facebook app, the Facebook platform, which is one component the people that are in charge of Facebook are presiding over
Billions of people and their most intimate information, their geolocation, their microphone, their camera, their pictures, their texts, their posts, where they go, where they eat, what they buy, there's a marketplace, they post videos on there, you know, they have disappearing messages, encrypted messages.
Messages, you know, it's it's all kinds of things.
It's a very intimate thing.
It's a lot different than like Home Depot obviously Which you go into Home Depot and you buy like light bulbs or wood or something Facebook is in the business of really selling like your attention your mind your information your whereabouts very intimate things but it's not just It's not just the nature of the businesses, it's the businesses themselves.
They're not just what you think of.
When you think of Google, you think of the search engine.
But Google's bigger than the search engine.
They also own YouTube, and they own all the advertisements.
You know, most of the advertisements that you see on the internet are powered by Google.
And most websites and digital projects are financed by the advertisements.
And when you think about advertisements and what's displayed and what's not displayed, that can actually influence the stock market.
That could actually influence the market.
So they're really bigger.
When you think about these companies, it's important to consider them not just On the user experience level, which is to say you shouldn't think about Google as an example, as the search engine that I use on my phone.
You have to think about it as one of the biggest companies in the world by market cap, by revenue.
It is run by some of the richest people in the world, the biggest billionaires.
And what they do comprise is not just the user services that you're using on a day-to-day basis, but lots of things that you don't even know about, like artificial intelligence, and they're designing algorithms, they contract with the federal government, they're doing research in quantum computing.
I mean, they're doing lots of things that we don't even know about.
In some sense, they are more influential, more powerful than the state.
And if you look at where they stand on the stock market, they're driving the entire stock market.
You know, specifically if you look at the past year since the coronavirus lockdown began, take a look at the biggest performers in the stock market.
What's driving the S&P 500?
It's the top five companies, which are all these Silicon Valley big tech companies.
So when you think about these things, it's important not to sort of pigeonhole your understanding and think about it as, oh, Facebook, that's where I go and I sold my Yu-Gi-Oh cards.
Oh, Google, you know, that's how I search.
Wikipedia articles, or something like that, you know.
These are the biggest companies, most powerful, run by the richest, most powerful, influential people in the world.
Their activities are vast, wide-ranging, you don't even know about all of them.
They influence the world in ways that you probably don't even think about, in ways that some people may not even be able to understand.
And, you know, in short, we can go into great detail on that, but it's important to consider it, it's very important to consider it that way when we think about Big Tech, what they're capable of, and so on.
And specifically when we consider this name change here with Facebook.
They're rebranding to Meta, right?
I mean, that's just to give you an idea of the scale and, you know, kind of the nature of what we're talking about here with Facebook.
When they're talking about meta, in case you don't know, that is a reference to the metaverse, which this is something that hasn't really arrived yet.
This is something that has only really been talked about.
There's been speculation.
There's been research and development.
People theorized about it.
And I don't even really fully understand it.
I'm not even the expert on this, but the best way to explain it, I guess, is sort of like combining the digital world and real life.
And that already happens to an extent.
We interface with the digital world through smartphones, and now through computers, which are everywhere.
You know, it used to be the case, of course, that you go onto a desktop PC to get on the internet, and it was very limited.
You know, you had email or forums or certain websites or something, and then you had social media, but then you had the smartphone, and now you've got computers in your car, in your fridge, in your air conditioner, in your printer.
And it's everywhere, right?
And there's computers at McDonald's, and there's computers at school, and at work, and... So we interface with the digital world, you know, through mobile phones, PCs, and everything.
But the metaverse is really about connecting things a lot further.
And they're talking about projects like, for example, AR.
Which is not like an AR-15, but augmented reality.
AR stands for augmented reality glasses.
Where you put on frames, you put on lenses, and you'll actually be able to see a digital interface in the glasses.
And as opposed to virtual reality where it's blocked off and you see a virtual world, augmented reality, you see the world, but with digital elements, a digital overlay.
And so at once you're in the world, seeing the world, and the world is interacting as you see it and perceive it with the digital, with some kind of digital visual overlay.
And so you'll have digital, not real components that you could see when you're walking around.
Maybe you can see somebody differently.
You can see people wearing things that are digital.
See digital information about people, places, things.
And they've tried to roll this out in a limited capacity.
It hasn't worked so far with things like Google Glass or Snapchat glasses.
And they're still working on that.
This is just one example of how the digital world and the real world are going to become closer together and going to be linked together more intimately.
And that's just, again, one example of the technology which Facebook is working on and thinks is going to be a part of this landscape.
And so the point is to merge, basically, the real world with these online profiles.
And so the sort of Facebook Social media experience will now be your waking existence in the real world.
You can see people, places, and things in the same way that you would see them on Facebook interfacing through your phone.
But now that sort of imperfect interface has been removed.
Instead of having to go on your phone to see that on a screen, now it's in front of your face all the time and your whole world is filtered through it.
And so it's sort of the seamless, that's kind of the critical part here, is a sort of seamless and ubiquitous integration between the real world and the digital.
When they say metaverse, that's what they're talking about.
You know, the Latin prefix meta, meaning over or above, You know, usually meaning things that are sort of greater, all-encompassing.
Metaverse meaning combining the real universe and the digital universe.
It's sort of a universe that's bigger than, you know, combining both worlds.
And then bigger than both of them.
That's what Facebook is in the business of now.
That's what their name change signifies.
And they changed their logo too.
It used to be a blue thumbs up.
Now it's a blue infinity symbol.
This is all very ominous stuff.
And I'll go through this article, I'll read this article in the New York Times, then I'll go a little bit further and talk about the significance of this.
But I'll just recap and summarize here with this article.
It says, quote, Facebook has changed its corporate name to Meta as part of a major rebrand.
The company said it would better encompass What it does as it broadens its reach beyond social media into areas like virtual reality.
The change does not apply to its individual platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp.
Only the parent company that owns them.
The move follows a series of negative stories about Facebook based on documents leaked by an ex-employee.
Francis Hagen has accused the company of putting profits over safety.
Facebook boss Mark Zuckerberg announced a new name as he unveiled plans to build a metaverse, an online world where people can game, work, communicate in a virtual environment, often using VR headsets.
He said the existing brand could not possibly represent everything that we're doing today, let alone in the future.
He said, over time I hope that we are seen as a metaverse company and I want to anchor our work and our identity on what we are building towards.
We're now looking at and reporting on our business as two different segments, one for our family of apps and one for our work on future platforms.
As part of this, it is time for us to adopt a new company brand to encompass everything we do to reflect who we are and what we hope to build.
Mr. Zuckerberg said the new name reflects that, over time, users will not need to use Facebook to use the company's other services.
To an outsider, a metaverse may look like a version of VR, but some people believe it could be the future of the internet.
Instead of being on a computer, people in a metaverse might use a headset to enter a virtual world, connecting all sorts of digital environments.
It is hoped that the virtual world could be used for practically anything from work, play, and concerts to socializing with friends and family.
So that's that's the scale and the scope of what we're talking about and it's very important to consider this.
Facebook as it exists right now or Meta is one of the biggest companies in the world.
I haven't looked at it lately but earlier this year you know again this is very outdated but I don't know what their market cap looks like these days but it's in the range of like 500 billion to a trillion dollars.
Huge.
Top 5 biggest companies in the world.
They've got 3 billion people.
Nearly 3 billion people using Facebook alone.
and then it combined close to $4 or $5 billion on their other products.
Those are all the users on their platform.
And think about what they do now.
They do encrypted messaging.
They do direct messaging.
They do Facebook Marketplace, which is commerce.
They do videos.
Facebook is sort of a video platform now, too.
They do groups.
They do advertisements, commerce.
People can host their businesses on Facebook or Instagram.
They do picture sharing.
They do text-based posts.
They do a lot right now.
They're also planning on doing a currency called Libra, which is supposed to be a cryptocurrency.
And they've got other ambitions.
And that's how big they are now.
What they're talking about doing in the future is taking that and potentially doing something, which is new projects that will be bigger than all of that as it exists now.
So think of it.
Biggest, one of the biggest companies in the world, run by one of the richest guys in the world.
They've got their hands in every industry, you know, every sector of the economy.
And now that's just one sector, that's one section of their entire company.
There's a whole new section now, like they said, which is going to encompass these future new metaverse projects.
In other words, how big can Facebook be when you don't even know you're using a Facebook product when you're using it?
It's as big as it is now, and what they're talking about is making it orders of magnitude bigger.
It's a trillion dollar company now.
And now they're gonna make it so that you don't even know when you're using Facebook.
And it's seamless.
You wake up and you're using Facebook.
You go to work or school and you're using Facebook.
You talk to your friends, play games, socialize, go to a concert, unknowingly, inadvertently, you're using Facebook.
And then you go to bed and you're using Facebook.
And this is something that, like I said, if you thought that your life was intertwined with Facebook and social media before, because you text people on there, and you have Facebook downloaded on your phone, and you carry your phone everywhere, your phone's got a microphone and a camera, what happens when you've got Facebook glasses on, or a Facebook VR headset?
Facebook is inside your car, and it's in... it's everywhere.
That's what they want to govern.
That's what they want to preside over.
This is a very scary prospect because likely this is the future of the internet.
A lot of people look at projects like this AR, VR, NFTs even as an example if you don't know what that is.
And a lot of people look at that and they roll their eyes and they say, oh, that's ridiculous.
Do people really think that VR conference calls are the future of the Internet?
Do people really think that what amounts to something like a copyrighted JPEG that people are paying tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars for, that's the future of the Internet?
The answer is probably.
You know, if you consider that Mark Zuckerberg running Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram, and Messenger, If he's putting all their chips behind this at Facebook, this is where it's at.
This is where the research and development is.
They seem to anticipate what we know before we know we want it, based on the massive amount of data that they have.
And they have the best developers, they've got the best innovators, they pull people out of MIT and Harvard and all the best schools from all over the world.
If Mark Zuckerberg says this is the future of social media, It's probably worthwhile to listen to.
Maybe it's not, you know, I don't know that he's infallible, but I also don't think it should be taken lightly.
If he thinks that's the future, if that's where Facebook is redefining their company, they're redirecting the whole course of their organization towards that, it's probably worthwhile to listen to.
And we need to think very carefully about where this is going.
This is still somewhat in the short term where we're talking about Facebook, Google, these kinds of companies presiding now not over just the digital world but your whole world.
And where will their jurisdiction start and where will it end?
These are so-called private companies that will now have virtually the entire world On their platform.
They'll have all their messages, all their pictures, all their most intimate moments.
They may have cameras on everybody's faces that see what every person in the world sees, and hear what every person in the world hears.
This is as powerful as anybody, or anything, or any institution has ever been on Earth, with the exception of Jesus.
Like, think about that.
Does anybody consider this?
That when you have 3 or 4 or 5 billion people, which is what we're going to see in the future, seamlessly integrated with Facebook in their lives, with cameras, microphones, geolocation, with satellites, all their messages, potentially their thoughts, with satellites, all their messages, potentially their thoughts, emotions, memories, microexpressions, their interactions, their whereabouts, their habits, their likes and dislikes, throughout their whole life, and all that data stored forever, has anybody stopped Throughout their whole life.
And all that data stored forever.
Has anybody stopped and considered that that makes Mark Zuckerberg or Meta or Facebook, whatever the hell this is.
That makes this more powerful than anything in the history of the universe.
Anything in the history of mankind and planet earth.
Caesar was not more powerful than what Facebook is becoming, than what Big Tech is becoming.
And neither was Joseph Stalin, and neither was Mao Zedong, nor is today somebody like Klaus Schwab or the Rothschilds or whatever, and I'm sure they have their hand in this, but you understand what I'm saying.
This is more information, this is more power than anybody has ever had, than has ever existed, objectively.
You know, not just that has ever been possessed or wielded, but this is more power than has ever existed.
In the history of human civilization, in the history of humanity.
And so this opens up some very large questions about what is human civilization going to look like once this happens?
Is there a check or balance on the power of Facebook?
At that point, Facebook becomes more powerful than the government.
More powerful than anything that we can comprehend today.
This is a total reorganization of society.
The modern state is over.
It's still, of course, relevant.
It's still powerful.
It still exists as an entity.
But the modern era, the modern nation-state, which emerged around the time of the Treaty of Westphalia four or five hundred years ago until, you know, maybe ten years ago?
It seems like that's over.
And now this technological society is finally being actualized with all of its full consequences.
You know, I don't think 15 years ago people really knew what they were doing when Facebook came around.
At first, you know, how did that come about?
Mark Zuckerberg created a dating app on Harvard to, like, at Harvard to rate girls or something.
And now it's turned into, well, what happens if we stored everything digitally on the Internet?
Under the control of one company.
We're finally seeing what the ramifications of that look like, you know, following that through to its logical conclusions, the kind of incentives that that creates, and the possibilities created by that.
And it goes even further than that.
Their real goal, if you listen to what any of these people talk about, and this is even further out into the future, if you read Klaus Schwab, if you read some of these other billionaires, Club of Rome, that kind of stuff,
Their ultimate endgame is a full-on technological singularity or full-on transhumanism transcending this universe entirely and it goes from metaverse and this is in the farther out future but eventually the goal is that this is just a stepping stone to get into total transcendence of of humanity itself and of the flesh.
They want to use this AR VR You know, interfacing with the digital world becomes a little bit more intimate and where they want to go ultimately is put the technology in our brains, put it in our bodies.
They want us to become inseparable from the technology.
And so all this stuff becomes very important.
The internet, AI, robotics.
Now all these technologies are bound up in each other leading towards total new, completely new world.
Where man and machine are inseparable and the individual is inseparable from the collective.
You know, think about it.
A lot of people talk about AI and they talk about robots and what happens if the robots overthrew us or what happens if AI doesn't like us.
It's like, well consider the effect too of the network, of the internet as well.
Not only are we going to have probably computers in our brain and computers in our bloodstream, nanobots and things like that, But also, they are going to be communicating with each other.
The machine elements that are going to be incorporated into our minds and bodies are going to be communicating with each other and with all the other machines in the world.
They're putting up 5G towers everywhere.
Why is that?
5G is about increasing the connectivity.
For example, you need 5G in order to have the economy of things.
Or what is that called?
You need 5G in order to have-- I'm thinking of something specific.
The phrase of it escapes me right now.
But when you have these computers embedded in your clothes, and your fridge, and your appliances, and everything like that, you need 5G to make it all communicate with each other.
You need 5G to have self-driving cars.
You need that level of connectivity.
Do people realize that as we transcend, as we go further into this digital world, it's not just about giving over our minds and bodies to the technology, but it's also about giving over our individual selves to this greater network.
Because it's not just like you're going to have Neuralink in your brain, and nanobots in your blood, and your appliance tells you what's in your fridge, and your car tells you this about your car, and so on.
But all the things All the computers, all the electronic things in your house, in your work, in your neighborhood, they're talking to each other.
They're talking to the computers in you.
And all the computers around you and all the computers in you are talking to all the computers in everybody else and all the computers in every other place.
And that is a very scary prospect.
Is human freedom possible in a scenario like that?
Can a human being be a free individual with a mind and with a will and all those things with that level of integration?
That's really what's disturbing.
That's the kind of transcendence that they're really aiming for.
That's where this stuff is headed.
You know, you thought it was bad that like, oh, Google can read your emails or something, or the FBI can find your search queries.
This is what's coming.
The metaverse, when they're talking about putting glasses on you, think about the trajectory of that.
It went from your desk, to your hand, to in front of your eyeballs.
Elon Musk is now talking about Neuralink, which is embedded inside of your brain and interfaces directly with your brain.
Think about how close it's getting.
How intimate and deep it's getting.
And it's getting more miniature.
It's getting more connected.
And as far as these products and services go, they're becoming more ubiquitous in our lives.
To the point where eventually, and this is where it's headed, they want to become some kind of mutant, some kind of cyborg entity where there's a seamless integration not between the digital and the real, but between man and machine altogether.
And then an integration with each individual man and all of mankind.
And it's kind of like digital collective.
Everybody's thoughts, everybody's feelings, everybody's sight, their hearing, their memories, all of that and conversations and things.
All of that being read and feeding into some kind of AI hive mind.
I know a lot of this stuff sounds crazy or something, but it's really not hard to see once you begin to consider the technology that's here, where it was before, where it is now, what they're going to do in the near future.
It's really not hard to see kind of the inevitable consequences of this, where they're trying to take this.
That's what they want.
They want something like immortality.
They want something like transhuman globalism, you know, collective globalism or something like that.
It's very disturbing stuff.
So I don't even really have a take on that.
I don't even think there really is an angle and here's why that's bad.
I think it speaks for itself.
But anyway, so Facebook has changed the name of their company, but this is the big picture stuff folks.
Very important to pay attention to this.
unidentified
This is bigger than all the other issues.
nick fuentes
Technology and our relationship with technology, specifically what the elites are trying to bring about with technological progress, this is the most important thing that's happening in human civilization right now.
There's political stuff, and there's local stuff, and there's ideological fights and so on, but I think in the grand scheme of things, this is sort of the defining phenomenon of our time.
You know, when people look back in history, they're not going to talk about populism.
They're going to talk about industrial, technological society.
You know, if you compare this time to any other time, they're not going to talk about managers or kings or queens or something like that.
If the last century was a nuclear age or something like that, this is going to be the age of the digital transcendence.
Trying to achieve that, what that's going to look like.
Who knows to what extent it's possible?
You know, some of this stuff may sound like science fiction, and maybe it is.
I'm not a scientist.
I don't know how far this stuff can go.
I'm probably not as optimistic as the tech people.
For example, I don't believe they'll ever achieve general artificial intelligence.
I don't even think self-driving cars are in the near future.
And I'm not a specialist of course, I don't have a technical knowledge, but from a philosophical point of view, I think a lot of that stuff may not even be within our grasp, and certainly it's not within our grasp anytime soon.
Nevertheless, that is what they have in mind, and that is what they are thinking about when they draw an infinity symbol, and they say, we're gonna control the universe, we're gonna control the metaverse, that's what they're talking about.
So, that's Facebook, that's meta, Terrifying prospect, very terrifying prospect for humanity and unfortunately I don't really know that there's a whole lot that can be done because any kind of organized opposition to this would be thwarted by these institutions themselves.
How are you going to organize some kind of Luddite movement or anti-tech movement or anything like that When we stand opposed to the most powerful institutions in the world.
I don't know that there will be any kind of successful, viable, organized resistance and, you know, maybe it'll come from the state, but then how do you gain control of the state without these services?
unidentified
I don't know.
nick fuentes
It's a lot of open-ended questions, scary stuff.
So I don't really have any conclusion here.
There's nothing really conclusive to say other than it's a very terrifying prospect what's in store.
They've got some sick fantasies and where this is pointed, people should think about and consider the full ramifications.
I think a lot of people look at this in the same way people look at the Internet 25 years ago.
There were a lot of people 25, 30 years ago that looked at the Internet and they thought it was a novelty.
How could people 35 years ago, how could they begin to imagine the ways in which the Internet and computers would transform their world?
They couldn't think about it.
It's like how could people 120 or 130 years ago realize how cars and planes and the nuclear bomb would change the world?
unidentified
So...
nick fuentes
You know, people just don't have the kind of foresight.
People can't consider what they haven't seen, what they have no experience with.
And so, you know, in the same way that 30 years ago people looked at the internet and said, oh, that's a sort of neat little thing, that's a sort of fun novelty, of course they couldn't possibly think about YouTube and Facebook and how it impacts elections and it's the future of warfare, information warfare, so on.
In the same way, people look at NFTs and they look at the Metaverse and they say, oh, that's corny.
That'll never catch on.
So what?
You're going to be in a conference call and your avatar will be Pikachu or something?
It's like, no, it's a little, it's a little bigger than that.
And if Mark Zuckerberg is staking Facebook on this, we should probably listen and we should be worried.
But that's the Metaverse.
That's the rebrand.
Kind of a nice change.
It pays to talk about that on the show.
I've always found that interesting.
I'm not gonna lie, I'm a little bit curious.
this this goes i'm kind of interested i'm not gonna lie i'm a little bit curious it's daunting but it is interesting because i feel like the technology is basically stagnated i feel like you know there hasn't really been anything that new in the past 15 years i don't
I mean, I was born in 98, and this is supposed to be this era of rapid technological development, maybe the pinnacle of technological development, or at least we reached the fastest pace of technological development at that point.
But it feels like some new things came out when I was a kid, and then it's basically been the same, you know?
iPhone came out in what, like 2010?
Facebook came out in around the same time.
YouTube came out a little bit before that.
How different is it really today than it was back then?
Yeah, the iPhone is better.
It's faster.
It has more cameras.
We have Wi-Fi and 5G and, you know, there's more like apps on the iPhone.
But is it really a completely different society than it was back then?
I mean, in some ways, yeah, like you've got Uber and you got, you know, stuff like that.
which are somewhat different but is it is it really as different 10 years ago from now as it was say for example between like i don't know 1980 and 1995 you know or 1970 and 1985 i don't think so i think that uh you know at least you can't see the changes I don't know that they're very noticeable.
They seem to be incremental, gradual and they're not of type.
It's not like new types of things are coming around and new categories are being invented.
It's really more like the same things are just being improved incrementally.
Because it's... I haven't really seen anything mind-blowing.
It's really just kind of the same, the same stuff.
You know, there was a time when people were like, whoa, a microwave?
You mean we could reheat the food in two minutes?
And you know life is basically the same as it was in the 60s, but with like computers and phones and stuff You know what I'm saying?
So I am a little bit interested to see can they change the game?
It's scary.
It's probably gonna be worse for us But I'm a little bit curious I'm not gonna lie.
I kind of want to get into the metaverse.
I kind of I love social media Yeah, I mean is it like I said, it's probably bad for us, but it's pretty it's pretty neat.
unidentified
It's pretty cool I'm kind of curious.
nick fuentes
I'm a little bit curious, I'm not going to lie.
That's probably what's going to destroy humanity, but I'm a little bit curious what happens when they unroll this.
I want to see something new.
I want to see a technological wonder.
Anyway.
So that's meta, but I want to move on because we're running out of time and I want to talk about the New York City anti-vax strike or protest which happened today.
Kind of interesting.
Like I said, I wouldn't necessarily say that I'm, like, excited or optimistic about this because, you know, we've seen this before, we saw this in Chicago, we've seen this in other states and some other cities, and even with private companies, and it never really seems to work.
So I'm, you know, I'm happy about it, but I would caution against anybody looking at this and saying, oh, and therefore we're good, you know, we're in the clear.
Now we're on the right track or something like that because I don't think that's what this is at all.
So, I'll read to you.
This is from the New York Times.
It talks about how in New York City their vaccine mandate deadline is coming to effect shortly and there was a major protest outside the mayor's mansion today organized by the New York Fire Department as well as I think police attended and some other union workers attended.
New York City, like other major cities, they've mandated that all of their city workers, all of them, get vaccinated.
No exemptions, no opt-out where you can get a negative daily or weekly negative COVID test or something like that.
Every city worker has to be vaccinated.
That's the policy in New York City.
So the deadline's coming up and thousands of these workers, union workers, are saying they don't want to get vaccinated.
And so there's reports that maybe there's going to be shortages of vital staff, first responders, firefighters, police officers, other types of personnel, because people are going to just simply refuse.
And it sounds familiar because we heard that about the Chicago police and we heard that in Washington state.
I think in San Francisco, too.
So, I'll read you this report from the New York Times.
It says, quote, City officials are bracing for the possibility that thousands of essential workers, including police officers, firefighters, and sanitation employees, could be placed on unpaid leave starting on Monday when the city's sweeping mandate requiring that almost all municipal workers receive at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine takes effect.
With just one-third of the workers in the fire and sanitation departments and one-quarter of the police force yet to prove that they had been vaccinated as of Thursday morning, city agencies were putting in place an array of contingency plans, including mandating overtime for vaccinated workers and canceling vacations to fill staffing gaps.
So it's one-third of fire and sanitation that's unvaccinated and a quarter of the police.
Mayor Bill de Blasio, a Democrat in a second term who issued the mandate, predicted on Thursday that many city workers would get a shot at the last minute, as happened just before similar mandates took effect in recent months for health care workers and school employees.
But defiance of the mandate is running high among some workers.
In a protest outside the mayor's residence on Thursday, many demonstrators wore sweatshirts and shirts bearing fire department engine and ladder company numbers from across the city.
Union leaders led chants of hold the line and took aim at Mr. de Blasio for ordering vaccinations on what they said was too short of a timeline.
See, that's the rub.
The mandate applies to roughly 160,000 city employees at some three dozen agencies, including some with very high vaccination rates among their staff, such as the Landmarks Preservation Commission with a perfect 100% and the Mayor's Office at 96%.
An additional 140,000 city workers, mainly hospital, public health and school employees, were already required to be vaccinated under earlier mandates.
New York is one of the first major American cities to require that its entire workforce receive the vaccination without the option of getting regular coronavirus tests instead.
San Francisco set a similar mandate for its 35,000 city workers, which goes into effect on Monday.
And Los Angeles and Chicago have been pushing public workers to get vaccinated too.
Among states, Washington and Massachusetts are requiring their state employees to get fully vaccinated as well.
All workers placed on unpaid leave can return to work as soon as they show proof of a first vaccine dose.
The city has not yet announced how long workers may stay on leave before they are fired and expects to work that out with the unions.
Dire predictions of job losses also preceded each of the last two vaccine mandates, one for the tens of thousands of Department of Education employees, which went into effect on October 4th, and again for over a million health care workers across the state, which went into effect around the same time.
In each case, thousands of holdouts appeared for shots at the last minute, and in some cases after deadlines, boosting vaccination rates among healthcare and education employees to around 95%.
So, it's sort of a mixed bag.
On the one hand, it's a good sign that people are protesting, and they're chanting, hold the line, and they're refusing to get vaccinated.
But there's a lot in here which is concerning.
You know, for example, these are all union workers.
They're all unionized city workers.
And if you noticed in the article, they said the problem is not the mandate.
It's not privacy.
It's not the vaccine itself.
It's not that it's compulsory.
They said the problem is that the deadline is coming up too soon.
And again, I don't know if that's something they're just saying because it really doesn't make sense.
The vaccine is free and it's widely available.
So, they've had all year to get the vaccine.
It's been widely available for months now.
Availability is not the problem and the timeline is not a problem either because it's been widely available for months.
So, that leads me to believe that when they say It's just too soon?
Like that sounds to me like a political decision.
That's like some kind of calculated rhetorical decision that they made to make it about the timing of the deadline rather than what the deadline is for in itself.
But I'm a little bit concerned that it's not because they said the same thing in Chicago.
Initially, in Chicago, when the police union instructed the police officers not to submit their vaccination status, initially they said it was about privacy.
Then, when the deadline actually went into effect, they said, well, the problem is that the union wasn't consulted.
In other words, they have no problem with the mandate itself and everything that that entails.
They're really just concerned about the so-called details, the timing, the policy of unpaid leave and when they get fired and so on.
And they just should have consulted with the union.
They don't like that the union wasn't brought in to a conversation that they're willing to participate in, which ostensibly they have no problem with.
It's just that they weren't consulted.
And so in Chicago, they backed down.
They walked it back.
And in New York City, I'm hearing something similar.
They're not out there protesting that they have to get vaccinated or that their privacy is being violated or that it's compulsory.
Allegedly, they're protesting.
Again, nominally, what they're saying is that they don't like that the deadline is so soon.
Now, that doesn't make a lot of sense to me, like I said, because that really shouldn't be an issue, that it's too soon.
If that's the only problem, well, hey, you had a long time to get it and it's everywhere.
Maybe they mean it.
That wouldn't make sense to me, but it's concerning that that's the battle cry because it should be no mandate.
Doesn't even have to be no vaccine, but it has to be no mandate.
But I'm not hearing that from anybody.
I'm not hearing that from any of the unions.
We didn't hear that from the Chicago Police Union.
We're not hearing this from the New York City Sanitation, from the Fire Department, from the police.
We're hearing all these other things.
You didn't consult the union.
The deadline's too soon.
It's not flexible enough.
What about some people that have exemptions?
Nobody's really protesting the mandate itself, and that's somewhat concerning.
The other thing is, like this article says, they had previous mandates.
They mandated that education and health employees got their vaccine on October 4th, which was three weeks ago, and there were rumors that there would be shortages of staff when that deadline went into effect, and then that just never materialized.
They've got 95% vaccination.
The holdouts got vaccinated last minute and then they did after the mandate went into effect.
When faced with losing their job or getting vaccinated, they chose getting vaccinated.
95% of them.
And lots of other parts of the city government have already been nearly fully vaccinated.
It's just a small percentage of holdouts in the fire department and the police department.
And when they go out and protest, they're not even protesting the mandate.
They're just saying, give us more time.
So it's a bright spot that people are standing up to this, that they're speaking out, but that being said it's really not that bright when the message is wrong and it's dubious how long they're gonna be holding out.
They're saying hold the line, but they've said that before and we've seen it with the, what was it, Delta Airlines?
Where they said, well, we're not going to... I think it was Delta.
They said, we're not going to enforce a vaccine mandate.
We're just going to surcharge you or upcharge you $200 a month for your health care if you don't get vaccinated.
And then they got to 95% vaccination.
Remember that?
And same with Southwest.
You know, they had a vaccine mandate.
Since then, they've backed down.
But it's relatively the same thing.
We've seen other strikes and walkouts and things like that, but I'm not hearing about too many success stories.
I'm hearing about a lot of capitulation.
A lot of people are just capitulating.
So we'll see what happens in New York.
We'll probably know about it next week or the week after that, you know, what the effects of the mandate will be, if there's going to be shortages, and we'll see it.
We'll see it in the streets.
If the garbage starts piling up, if the crime is bad, if there's a visibly smaller police force or something, then we'll know that there's a strike going on, but I'm not really banking on it.
I'm not counting on it because You know, time and again, nobody seems to be willing to stand up even to the mandate.
No one's going to fight the vaccine.
That's been made apparent.
And no one's even going to fight the mandate.
They all want to quibble about details.
Well, we want our exemption.
Well, we want more time.
Well, we want this or that.
You know, nobody's really resisting what it is in itself.
So, there's not a lot of room, in my opinion, for optimism then on this front.
We'll see, but I'm not very optimistic about it.
I will say though, don't let this dissuade you, because like we said on the show yesterday, these people are suckers.
If you're out there getting vaccinated and complying, and you become part of that 95%, you're the sucker.
You're going to keep your job, but you're going to be fully vaccinated, and then you're going to be getting boosters, and it's going to be other things For the rest of your life, in order to keep your employment, this is the opportunity for people to get out, to get out of the rat race.
Healthy, alive, in one piece, start thinking about it, because these kinds of arbitrary demands that are detrimental to your health and conscience, this is only the beginning.
They're going to become more, the demands are going to become more onerous, they're going to become more Strenuous.
They're going to become more frequent.
And it's going to be the same deal.
The same ultimatum.
Do what we say or get fired.
So, you know, some people are going to get vaccinated.
They're going to get their booster shots.
They're going to do a lot of things that they're not happy about doing.
And then one day they're going to say, I'm sick of it.
And then they're going to get themselves fired.
Well, why would you go through all that?
Why would you destroy your body and violate your conscience and do all these things just to realize in the future after all that what I'm telling you right now?
You know what I mean?
Some people are gonna have this realization and say, I've had enough five years down the road and they've been totally vaxxed up and they, you know, been through all this other bullshit, they did this, said that, and they're gonna have a lot of regrets.
So, you know, I stand by it.
Do not get vaccinated.
I don't know how optimistic I am that there's going to be this mass movement or anything like that.
We've got to hold the line.
We've got to stay strong.
Don't get vaccinated.
Find an exemption if you can, but be willing to get fired if you can't.
Do not get vaccinated.
It doesn't matter what the person next to you is doing.
You got to decide for yourself.
Are you owned?
By global government?
Are you owned by Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates and the Jews and Dr. Fauci and Big Pharma and the Club of Rome?
Are you owned by them?
Are you controlled by them?
Are you that desperate?
They control how you feed yourself and how you make a living and so on and so you let them control your body and your soul?
I think that's ultimately what it is.
It's kind of like you're giving it up.
You're kind of selling your soul for... And some people might say, well you don't have a family!
You don't make a living like the rest of us!
Yeah, you're right.
I don't have a family.
I don't have much to lose.
And you're right.
I don't make a living like most of you do.
But maybe that makes me able to see it more clearly than somebody who is invested.
You know, I don't drink alcohol and so I could probably see better than an alcoholic can or somebody dependent on alcohol the evils of it.
I could probably say that plainly and independently and without, you know, the temptation.
And in the same way yeah I mean I don't have a family to feed and yeah I don't have a normal job so it's not it's not the same for me.
That is 100% true.
But maybe that puts me in a unique position to see another dimension of it that other people can't see.
Because a lot of people are willing to justify to themselves because they say, well, he just doesn't get it.
I need this.
I have to have this.
You know what you need?
And I know it's going to sound corny.
But the only thing that you need, the only appetite that you need to sate is your spiritual appetite.
This is what it tells us in the Bible.
And this is not necessarily a biblical matter, but it is a matter of conscience.
It's a matter of will.
It's a matter of mind.
It's a matter of the soul.
And so I don't know that it's necessarily a moral matter whether or not you get the vaccine.
I don't know that it's a moral question.
But it does concern certainly something spiritual in the sense that if you're willing to give up your conscience on this issue, and your body too, again, so you could make a living and you could live a more comfortable life, and it's definitely about convenience, it's definitely about comfort, You know, what else are you willing to compromise on?
What else in your conscience, what else of your body, of your flesh and the rest, are you willing to compromise for that?
And so this is when we're really going to separate out who's serious and who really believes this stuff and who doesn't.
Because if you go on and get vaccinated, I don't know that you really believe this stuff.
Honestly.
I mean, yeah, you believe it, but you're not living it.
And so if you're not living it, if you're not willing it, if you're not using those faculties And you're not consistent on that level.
Is it really a belief or is it just kind of like, I don't know, sort of an opinion, kind of like this arbitrary position you've taken, you know what I'm saying?
So, I think regardless of the chances that this could succeed on a national level, you still have a moral obligation, or some kind of obligation, again, I don't know that it's moral, but you do have an obligation to say no and not get vaccinated.
Because like I said, if you do it now, what else can they make you do?
If it's that important to you, if that is, if you're so dependent on the system, what does that say about you?
No, you can't take my job, you can't take my living, you can't, what will I do?
Where will I go?
I mean, if you answer to them on that basis, then they own you.
I think it's as simple as that.
And you know, that's a decision people have to make for themselves.
You can look at me and say, Nick, you don't get it.
You're stupid.
You don't have a real job.
You've never had a real job.
You don't know the decision I have to make.
It's so hard.
Okay.
Everybody has to make their decision.
Everybody has to make their decision.
It's your body.
It's your conscience.
And I'll tell you, the more people that go along with it, the harder that makes it for the rest of us.
But I'll tell you, no matter how hard it gets, I'm not getting it.
Some people might say it's not that hard for me because I'm not in the same situation, but I'll tell you that them making it harder on us, I've decided I'll never get it.
So it doesn't matter how hard it gets, I'm never gonna get it.
But it does make it harder for us, and I don't appreciate it, but people do have their own, you know, they have to make up their own mind and they have to make their own decision.
It's your body, it's your life.
You can live with that, then that's on you.
If you want to do that so you could keep making money, hey, whatever, and support your family and travel or do what you have to do.
I think it's unconscionable, but it's obviously everybody's prerogative to decide.
So, that's that.
I mean, we'll see what happens.
We're gonna keep an eye on New York and we'll, of course, be there on the ground next week.
At the end of next week, we'll be over in New York City.
So, not next week, the week after that.
So, stay tuned for that.
We'll keep an eye on this and we'll see how successful this holding the line will be.
But, in the meantime, we're gonna take a look at our Super Chats and see what you guys have to say about all this.
Let me crack open my San Pellegrino here.
And let me log on.
Let me log on to my Super Chats.
And see what we got here.
I don't really like this chair.
I don't really like my new setup, I'm gonna be honest.
I still feel uncomfortable.
I feel like this desk is too high.
I feel like the chair is too... I don't know, it's like the back is sort of like this.
I can't really lean back as much as I like?
I almost need to, like, break it, I think.
Anyway.
So I'm a little bit, I'm a little uncomfortable.
I'm uncomfy.
Okay.
Well, let's see.
We're gonna read your Super Chats here starting now.
unidentified
Let me, let me just pull it up real quick.
nick fuentes
How was that?
Was that a good show?
I don't know.
I feel like it was kind of all over the place.
You know?
A lot of different... a lot of different subject matter.
But maybe you guys like the change of pace.
I don't know.
Usually we don't talk about the tech stuff and... outside the context of censorship.
The VAC stuff is the usual, but...
All right, let's see.
Let's take a look.
We'll see what we got.
Let me take a sip first.
Okay.
MetaSquid says, should corporations be treated as people in a legal setting?
Yeah, I mean that's kind of like a dumb question.
Because the thing is, corporations are comprised of people.
So, I mean, what else would you treat it as?
I mean, I... People say there should be more restrictions, you know, specifically when it concerns, like, electoral politics, you know.
That's usually the conversation.
That's the context of this conversation happens as people say, well, should a corporation have the same Right, that an individual has to contribute to a campaign and therefore exercise partisan support.
It's like free expression.
Yeah, I think so.
I think so because corporations are comprised of people.
But certainly corporations are so big that there has to be some kind of distinguishing criteria.
Because people say they hate corporations.
And it's like that kind of shows how ignorant people are of what a corporation is.
You know, as a corporation could be one person.
In fact, I think that's what most corporations are.
It's like one person or a few people.
You know, a corporation is really just like a tax category, right?
It's just something arbitrary that exists in tax law, business law.
It's a legal classification of.
So when people say corporation, their mind goes to multinational, you know, giant corporation with hundreds or thousands of employees and millionaires and billionaires.
But that's not really what a corporation is.
I'm a corporation.
You know, I was a sole proprietor for a long time, tactically as a self-employed person of a corporation.
And I've got some corporations now, and it's not what you think.
If you've never done it, if you've just been a wage employee your whole life, and maybe you don't have the experience.
And not like I'm the most experienced person ever, but I've gone through it enough times to kind of get it.
It's not what people think it is.
So when people say corporations, it's like, well, yeah, people have to distinguish what they mean when they say it and there should be some kind of criteria in the law.
Because why should a sole proprietor be treated the same way as Facebook?
You know, a sole proprietor should be able to have the rights of a human being.
They should be treated as a human being because they literally are a human being.
And even a smaller corporation, a small business, should be treated that way.
Because it's one owner, probably making a living wage or a little bit more, but that should not be treated the same way as Amazon or Facebook or Apple.
You know, there should be some kind of criteria to separate and differentiate between the two.
Because I hear that and, you know, I get what you're saying, I understand what you're saying, but on a technical level a corporation is, you know, it's kind of a meaningless thing in a sense.
Because you could say corporation and you could mean your contractor, you know, your plumber is a corporation, and so is Apple.
So what are you talking about, you know?
Uh, Metal says there are two types of people.
Neither are black.
Interesting.
Epic Guy says Jesse Kelly put out a tweet today saying that he's kicking his sons out the moment they turn 18.
Conservatives will pretend to be pro-family, then do shit like this.
Yeah, I mean, I get it.
I understand the argument.
I understand what people are going for when they say that, when they say, you know, I want my kids to be independent.
That's what I did when I was a kid.
But you know, it's not, the situation is not the same as it was 30 years ago.
And even still, I don't know if this is a cultural thing, if this is an Anglo thing or something.
But this is not Trad, this is not Lindy, it's not even economical.
This really doesn't make any sense.
You know, this is like kicking your kids out when they turn 18.
I don't know when that started, and I don't know whose idea that was, but it's really not, that's not something that should be encouraged, in my opinion.
I think that having multi-generational households, that's probably the best way to have multi-generational wealth.
And honestly, that's probably a superior form of living because what are we really supposed to do as a society?
I mean, think about it this way.
You know, kid turns 18, maybe they go to college, maybe they go to trade school, maybe they just work, you know, maybe they just live at home and work or something, and the parents want to kick them out.
So what is that supposed to be?
We're going to have now mom and dad living at home, In a house that they raised a family in.
So, mom and dad living in a big house.
Big enough for a family, now with just the two parents residing in it.
And we're using this for the sake of example.
You could say, maybe there's more kids or something.
Maybe they move out, but...
You know, mom and dad have been working all their life.
They've saved all this money.
They have accumulated wealth.
The house is part of their wealth.
Bigger house probably than they would have otherwise if they were just a couple.
So they're gonna kick the kids out and they're just gonna sit there.
Now the kid's gonna have a rent, probably, or a mortgage.
Housing prices are inflated sky-high.
Wages are down.
Cost of living is up.
So now the kid's gonna go out and live on their own, making a subsistence living, not building wealth.
Mom and Dad accumulating wealth.
You know, the peak earning years are 40s, 50s, 60s.
That's when the wealth has been accumulated.
Retirement funds have been accumulated.
They're in a house probably that's, you know, got a lot of equity in it.
So the parents will continue to accumulate wealth in a big, basically empty house by themselves, empty nesters.
And then the kid, with very little earning potential, not even close to his peak, especially in this economy, still needs maybe to get a degree, develop a skill.
Or figure out some kind of a hustle or something.
They're not building wealth.
If anything, they're doing the opposite.
They're getting into debt.
Their cash flow is all wrong.
You know, they're pouring money into rent and other expenses, not making a lot of money.
So on a financial level, this really doesn't make a lot of sense.
The parents who have accumulated the wealth and are in their peak earning years, they continue to just accumulate towards what?
Retirement maybe or something like that?
And the kids, the kids who do not have the earning power, and the kids who do not have the accumulated wealth, and in a totally different economy, honestly, where it's difficult to get there to level up, they're drowning!
they're treading water with this sort of redundancy, too.
You know, now mom and dad live in a house, and the kid lives in an apartment or something.
This is redundancy.
You know, a kid lives in a studio apartment instead of his bedroom and his child at home.
So from an economical level, this doesn't really make sense.
The kid should be at home where it's not a big imposition on the parents.
Maybe he helps the parents.
I mean, it has to go both ways.
Maybe the kid helps out around the house, pays some of the bills or something like that, kicks something up to the parents, but the kid should stay at home so that he can accumulate wealth and he's not pouring money into rent and other things while he's building up his earning power, while he's getting educated, developing a skill, you know, whatever it is, working his way up the ladder at a company.
And then on a social level, it doesn't make much sense either.
You know, why really are the kids supposed to be kicked out?
So what?
Then they can go and have sex in their apartment?
That's usually why people move out is so they could go and throw parties and have sex.
That's generally speaking why they do it.
They're racing to get out of the house.
Why?
You know, when you're at home, you got a nicer house that you could afford on your own.
You got people in there, you got amenities, you got food, you got family, all that good stuff.
Maybe a car, transportation, right?
But what you don't have is independence, the nightlife, all that kind of stuff.
And then the parents, so the kid goes out, he's coming home to an empty, he or she is coming home to an empty apartment by themselves, You know, maybe using that for sexual trysts or something, parties, other degenerate stuff.
And the parents are then home alone.
Who's gonna take care of them?
They're maybe older.
I don't know how old they are.
I guess it depends.
But they're maybe older.
Maybe they need help.
And maybe got grandparents too.
Then there's that.
You know, it's really like three generations.
Grandparents, parents, and kids.
Who's going to take care of all these people?
From a social point of view, it doesn't make much sense either.
And so I think it's actually, I'm not an anthropologist, but I think historically it's a lot more common that you have the grandparents of parents and the kids living in the same house.
And now we have community you know when the when the kids get married then they move out and they have kids of their own and then their parents move in and this is how it's done and this is how you accumulate wealth this is how the kids can build up their earning power and this is actually how you have a real sense of community not like this kind of weird thing we have now where it's like this Seinfeld
This friends dynamic where people go into the city and they have an apartment and they have a group of friends and they sit around drinking wine and they're fucking each other and all this kind of stuff, but a real community.
You're there with your grandparents, your parents, you know, and there's this real, there's a real social fabric.
Fabric meaning things are bound together.
That's what a fabric is.
There's a common thread and threads stitch together.
What do you think the thread is?
The threads in the social fabric are the families.
You know?
That's what the thread is.
The thread, being linear, being a line, is temporal.
It's in time.
You know, that is part of, I mean, I don't know if I need to tell you this, but that is what the social fabric is comprised of, is through time.
It's the familial line.
It is family.
Mother and father and children.
And so people want to have a social fabric and then they say, I'm kicking my kids out when they turn 18.
Now it's one thing if your kids get married and have a family, then it might make more sense for them to move out.
Some don't.
But, you know, that makes more sense.
You get married and then you move out and you have a family on your own because you need more room and then you... it makes sense to have a house and it makes sense to have your own domicile and then maybe then your parents move in with you.
But this makes sense.
Where's everybody going?
Where's everybody in such a big hurry to get to when they're moving out and they're moving to the city and they gotta get a big apartment?
You know, it's pretty amazing.
Every young person is in this existential crisis of, I don't know anybody.
I don't have any friends.
Not just young people, old people too.
Empty nesters and these kids.
They're all treading water.
They're all lonely.
They're all, you know, searching.
They're all looking for belonging.
They're all looking for their place in the world.
And their place in the world is not on a corporate ladder.
It's where they feel at home.
where they feel like they're people like them, that know them, that know them, and, you know, they see all the time.
Like, that's what a social fabric is.
And at the same time, there's this gaping hole that people have, this sense of belonging, this social element, but yet everybody's racing to go live alone in a studio apartment.
You know, that's why a lot of kids are so desperate to go to college and then, you know, try and recreate the college experience once they're out of college.
That's why people into their 20s and 30s are still doing that kind of stupid shit, because college is the last, that's the last vestige of the kind of community you get from school.
You know, in college, like high school or primary school, you got all kinds of kids and you're all forced to be in classes and extracurriculars.
It's not the real world.
It's this artificial community.
And then they go out into the real world and it's like, oh, I'm at my job and then I come home to my apartment and that's it.
And maybe you make some friends, some work friends, old college friends or something, but it's not the same.
And people go, oh, I'm depressed.
And it's like, you know, gee, I wonder why.
It's almost like, it's almost like you have parents and grandparents and you're supposed to have a wife and kids.
It's almost like there's this whole social institution that's basically designed exactly for that.
Designed for companionship, one for one, a man and a woman married, and then the kind of the other kind of companionship, the other kind of social utility that you get from older and younger, from parents, grandparents, and kids.
Like, I don't understand this cult of, no, you got to get out there, you got to go and get an apartment, and all this kind of stuff.
It just never made a lot of sense to me.
So, yeah.
Parents talk like that.
They think they're so tough.
I'm gonna do this.
I'm gonna do that.
And I get it.
I mean, yeah.
It makes kids independent and things like that.
I'm not a parent, so I can't really speak to it with full knowledge.
But, um... I think that the, um... I think that that whole concept is kind of misguided.
People need to really kind of rethink what we want our lives to look like.
You know, I love my parents.
I don't know how much longer I'll have with my parents.
You know, and that goes for your whole family.
You don't know how much time you have with your family.
And those are the people that care the most about you, and those are the people that you care the most about.
Those are the people that if anybody has your best interest in mind, it's them.
Those are the people that know you, want what's good for you.
You know, they want what's best for the best part of you.
And I think it's honestly a sinister agenda to try to rip that apart.
And again, it's not to say that, oh, you should never live on your own or whatever or something like that.
But people should kind of rethink like what they want their lives to look like.
Do you want to live this kind of atomized existence which is based on partying and these very flimsy superficial relationships that you have at work or college.
It's drinking buddies, it's gaming buddies, people you play fucking fantasy football with, hookups with strange women or for women men on dating apps and In a lonely apartment in a high-rise in the city?
Is that an enriching life?
Are those the people we want to spend our limited time with?
Is that who we want to have an intimate cohabitation with?
I don't think so.
I think that's a very twisted way of looking at things and I don't think it's always been that way.
And I thought about that a lot in college, too, because that was the first time I lived on my own was when I went away to Boston, and I was in college, and I missed my parents.
You know, and I was in another state, I was in another city, this is what I was told everybody does, and this is fun, and I had a lot of fun and everything, but I missed my parents, I missed where I grew up, I missed that, I missed the roots, the grounding, you know, that I had.
I felt like I was disconnected.
I felt like a stranger, an alien.
It's not a good feeling.
It's not a good feeling to be in a strange place with strange people, but we've grown accustomed to that.
We've grown accustomed to the alienation, and I can't help but think that that is That's not good for us.
I don't think... I think that's good for the society that we've created.
That's good for employers.
That's good for our companies.
That's good for firms and for the government.
I don't think that's what's best for us.
You know, everybody's trying to create their own way of doing it.
It's like we've got the blueprint.
Get married young.
Have kids.
Stay with your family.
Stay with your family.
Stay where you're born.
With your community.
I don't understand this rush to just cut yourself off.
I'm leaving my parents.
I'm leaving my town behind.
It's like that Ben Shapiro show he did with Tucker Carlson.
When Tucker said, you know, you're forcing these people out of towns where their great-grandparents are buried in the local cemetery.
Because the jobs have fled, because venture capitalists come in and they eat everything up.
You know, private equity comes in and they devour these companies, they liquidate them, and they destroy towns and cities, and people are forced to migrate because there's no jobs and they live in ghost towns.
And Shapiro goes, well, all that you're promised in America is the adventure of a lifetime!
And it's like, that's what we want our lives to be?
Go and live the town you grew up in, your parents grew up in, to go work on an oil rig?
To go work on a fracking mine in North Dakota or Texas or something?
In some alien place with alien people?
Go and drown out your sorrows at the local dive bar?
That's no way to live!
unidentified
So...
nick fuentes
So yeah, I think that that attitude is really misguided, and it's for a couple of reasons.
Economical, or economic, I should say.
Economic reasons.
It's not economical to do that, but it's an economic reason.
Economic reasons and social reasons.
It's just, you know, why would you do that?
So you could sound tough or something?
I get it.
You make the kids independent and all that, but I think that's more about signaling than anything.
So yeah, I think that's pretty messed up.
unidentified
Amen.
Thank you.
nick fuentes
Pretty messed up.
I mean I get it.
It's the parent's prerogative.
It is the parent... I'm not saying that... I'm not trying to say that as like a spoiled kid.
Like, you can't kick me out mom!
I'm not saying that.
I'm saying that a multi-generational household To me, there's so much life there.
There's so much life in a multi-generational household.
I wish that my grandma, before she passed, I wish that she lived in my house.
You know?
With my family.
I wish we had that more intimate relationship.
Because your family are the closest people to you.
They really are.
Your parents, your grandparents.
And like I said, they want what's best for you.
And it serves nobody's interests other than people that want to take advantage of you to cut you off from your roots like that.
And that's what that is.
Young people, especially young men, their brain's not fully developed, their hormones still raging, they're impulsive, they're without guidance, again, without earning power.
To cut them off from their family?
To cut them off from their home and then put them, again, in that kind of environment in college?
And this is all so normalized.
And what's the expectation?
Guy goes to college and does what?
I mean, what do we all know happens in college?
Who is this benefiting?
This is benefiting the devil.
This is giving more souls to the devil and it's putting more souls in hell.
Honestly?
The family is a sacred institution.
You know, we understand God by analogy through the family.
God the Father.
God the Son.
The Virgin Mary.
The Blessed Mother.
And that's what that is.
You know, is God our Father the same way that your biological dad is?
Well, not literally.
It's an analogy.
Family is an analogy for how we were created.
In a loving way.
And how God wants what's best for us.
God created us to be with Him and so on.
Boy being is family is a sanctifying, sacred institution.
Matrimony is a sacrament.
And the fruits of matrimony, which is children, are a blessing.
This is a sacred institution.
It's in the Ten Commandments.
Honor thy mother and thy father.
And do parents have an obligation to the child?
This is a sacred institution.
That was created for us, for our natural, for our natural and supernatural ends.
And it's become so normalized to just shirk that and go off to college.
Fuck you mom and dad, I'm gonna go live in an apartment and I'm gonna fuck around.
donald j trump
Thatta boy!
nick fuentes
I hate, I hate these men.
I hate these men.
Especially boomers and Gen Xers.
I see it all the time.
unidentified
They go, thatta boy, get some pussy.
nick fuentes
That is mortal sin.
That is mortal sin.
And I know it comes across as preachy or puritanical to talk about it that way, but that's what it is.
It is mortal sin.
The kind of lifestyle that people live in college, make no mistake about it, there's no ambiguity, there's no gray area, it's mortal sin.
It is occasion to sin, it is mortal sin.
The devil, I'm sure, celebrates every time a young man or woman goes off to college because you see the results.
You see the results very visibly in the women.
You see those before and after pictures.
They go in with long hair and dresses and daddy's little girl and then they go and then they come out with bangs and their makeup and they, you know, and they're fat and everything.
So the devil loves when the children are separated from their parents who want what's best for them.
And go off to college where they can be tempted, where they've got, of course, all these worldly temptations, they've got that culture on the campus, and the professors, the institutions themselves are liberal, and all of this in the media too has celebrated these NELC, the NELC team, and the Senders, and this whole culture.
It's disgusting.
And we're all supposed to have this totally, you know, blase attitude about it.
Oh, kids will be kids.
That's just how it goes.
Well, that's not how it should be.
That's not how it's always been.
That's not how it's supposed to be.
So you really got to ask yourself, who is that for?
Because it's not for your well-being.
It's not for the well-being of you or for your kids that they get cut off from their roots, cut off from their parents and from their home.
unidentified
And sent out into the world where they're gonna do their thing.
nick fuentes
Attaboy!
I hate that culture so much because there's so many young people out there that are confused and they are searching because everything has been destroyed, you know.
All of these institutions, you know, they say we're men among the ruins.
Everything that we believed in has been destroyed, mocked, ridiculed, and so on.
And so people really are searching for something, and then they're told, they're affirmed in their male identity that, well, what you should search for is, you know, is PUSSY!
Or, you know, DRUGS!
Yeah man, go and do drugs, go and do psychedelics, go and have crazy, go and drink, and go and party!
You know, I always knew there was something wrong with it on some level.
I was never impressed by people that regale you with stories of, Dude, I got so drunk!
We were at this party, it was crazy!
This table broke!
Oh, this guy is crazy!
unidentified
He goes to a party, and then he dances like a retard, and that was insane!
nick fuentes
What a wild time!
Like, is that what life is for?
And I always was never impressed by that.
But then you realize the depth of how immoral it is, and you know, really, What's going on there?
And it's a very serious thing.
So, yeah, so I'm very much in favor of the multi-generational household.
I think that's how it should go.
But, but, at the same time, you gotta be getting married too.
That's the other thing.
We're not saying like, hey, go and be the 40-year-old virgin or something.
That's the whole point.
I mean the old way of doing things was that kids probably were moving out at a young age because they were having kids.
You know?
People become sexually active when they hit puberty.
That's when their reproductive faculties develop because that's when they're supposed to get married.
That's when they're supposed to get married and that's when they're supposed to have kids and start their own families.
So that goes hand-in-hand with it too.
But people have got to start to think about how we are made to live, what's good for us, what's good for our souls, what's good for our well-being, instead of this like, we think we need to do certain things to fit what society expects us to do or what fits into this concept of what manliness is.
You gotta go out on your own and you gotta sleep around and do this and that.
It's like, no, you don't actually.
So, anyway, that's a long rant.
That's a monologue.
That's a whole show.
That's a whole show contained within a super chat.
That's a whole show contained just within one super chat, but it's true.
But it's true.
So, anyway.
Chaffstream says, what are your thoughts on John Doyle?
He really transformed into a groyper and sounds just like you but on YouTube.
Also, what are your thoughts on Steven Crowder?
He's more right than Daily Wire fags.
I like Steven Crowder and I like John Doyle.
Zoomer Will says, I'm a Virginia Groyper and I don't know if I'm voting young kid for governor.
He's a total globalist who's spoken at billionaire summits, but he's also less likely to force the Vax.
Do you have a take on it?
Nah, I haven't been following it.
I agree with your assessment though.
I'd probably vote for him just on the Vax question alone, but I agree.
He's a globalist.
Joker says, a lot of conning.
People are trying very hard to replicate Trump or Tucker style speaking.
It's kind of unsettling.
But would you be more unsettled if they tried replicating your style of speaking?
Well, yeah, because it's me, so it'd be more uncanny.
AZGroipers saw Jaden, Gibby, and Joe the Boomer play Phasmophobia.
Had no idea Joe the Boomer had the voice of Command.
He really led them to victory over the Demons.
Nick, it doesn't seem that scary.
Will you play and Joe the Boomer's voice powerful in person too?
Uh, yeah, I might play.
We'll see.
It looks a little scary.
It's not that scary, I guess.
And, uh, yeah, no, Joe the Boomer's a specimen.
The guy is a towering giant.
People have compared him to Nephilim.
But he's getting up there.
In his advanced age, he's shrinking.
And, of course, the wheelchair takes a lot of the height off.
But he's still massive.
But yeah, the wheelchair, that kind of cut him down to size.
Cut him in half, just about.
And he's decaying before your very eyes.
He's incredibly advanced in age.
I don't know how he's still alive.
He's withering away rapidly.
So, I mean, he's massive.
God only knows how big he was in his heyday, 50, 60, 70 years ago.
But he's walked the earth for a long time.
And yeah, he's just as much of a presence in real life.
Bigger, I think, than he is online.
But online, he's able to be everywhere at once.
He's sort of like Padre Pio.
He can be in two or three or four places at once on the internet.
That's the thing.
In real life, he's only in one place.
On the internet, he seems to be everywhere.
He seems to be everywhere all the time, so...
Puerto Rican Groyper says, I worked in a court this summer and we had a defendant who was a black member of the Moorish Sovereign Citizens and he represented himself and signed all his motions in his own blood and cc'd Joe Biden, the UN High Commissioner and the King of Morocco, on all his motions.
LMAO.
Guy was nuts.
That's pretty funny.
ChosenLies is assuming you're allowed to join.
Will you use Trump's upcoming Truth Social at least during its initial release to see if it's worthwhile?
Yeah.
RealZoomerDev says, Hi Nick!
I found the long-lost episode of AF with Cassie Dillon on my hard drive.
I'm minting it as an NFT as we speak and will put it up for sale for 0.5 ETH.
By the way, AI is coming along.
Great!
K, thanks.
Is that the RealZoomerDev?
I don't know.
I can't tell.
But if it is, thanks.
Really?
The long... I don't... Was there ever an episode with her on it?
I don't think she was ever on my show.
But I was on her show.
Do you mean her show?
Because I was on Raised Right with her.
I subbed in for Will Nardi.
That must have been January 2017.
Or December 2016, if you can believe it.
Yeah, she was never a guest on America First, but I was a guest on Raised Right once.
Or was it twice?
I think it was just the one time.
But that's pretty interesting.
If you have that, you gotta send it to me.
I mean, you gotta just send me a copy.
I don't need the NFT.
But that's pretty funny.
Some of those streams are just lost.
Despite my best efforts, I tried to save everything, but some of those things are just lost.
To the ages.
It's kind of sad.
Like my debate with Will Nardi?
The DACA demolition debate?
That's gone.
Or I'm sorry, no, I have that one.
But my debate on his channel?
That's gone.
I'm trying to think.
My post-debate interview with Cassie Dillon on Periscope?
That's gone.
unidentified
And what else?
nick fuentes
Yeah, so there's a lot of it's just been lost, lost to time, sadly.
I still have a lot of that stuff though.
I still have a lot of recordings, text messages, screenshots, pictures.
Still got a lot of stuff.
unidentified
That was a different time.
nick fuentes
Different time way before, way before a lot of you guys, yeah, none of you guys were there for the most part.
Very few of you have been around that long.
That was five years ago.
Can you believe that?
I got into this five years ago.
Yeah, because my debate with Jake Brewer was almost five years ago to the day.
I think it was late October.
I don't know, maybe it was early November, because the election was November 8th, it was about a week before, so it was either late October or early November.
So it's almost five years to the date, or to the day I should say, that I debated Jake Brewer at BU.
And Cassie Dillon went out and she streamed it on Periscope.
And Milo watched the stream and Ben Shapiro watched the stream.
And she texted Ben Shapiro and she said something like, You gotta see this kid.
He's the next big thing.
You gotta take him under your wing.
And he was like, I'll check it out.
I have that screenshot.
And yeah, she said, oh, 28,000 people watched that.
You have like 10 job offers.
Ben Shapiro's gonna watch your show.
Milo's gonna, or the debate, Milo watched it.
My dad flew out to see it.
Those were good times.
I was just, I wore this tie!
I wore this tie!
I wore this exact tie.
To that debate.
I don't think I wore the same suit, but I wore this exact tie to that debate Hmm Yeah, and I remember walking up to the where the hell was it held it was held at the What did they call it the GCU which is like the common area in the basement.
Or was it in the...
Where the hell even was it?
I don't even remember, actually.
Oh, you know what?
No, it was upstairs.
I remember exactly where it was, yeah.
unidentified
Yep!
nick fuentes
I'm like, I don't...
So if you guys don't know, when I went to Boston U, I'll just tell the story really quickly.
When I went to Boston University 2016, I got in there, I was a freshman, I was 18, I had been on campus for two months and they were doing this project One of the, I don't know, some film student was doing a project for BU Today.
BU Today was like their daily paper, their daily website or whatever.
Campus News.
And they were doing this project about who people on campus were voting for and what they thought of the election.
I was somewhat famous at the time because I would wear a MAGA hat everywhere on campus and people were kind of talking about me like on Yik Yak and everything.
And so they found me and they said, hey we'd love to hear you and why you're voting for Trump.
So I was in this feature with like 10 other people and they were like, oh I'm gonna vote for Clinton.
They were all voting for Clinton.
But so I was featured.
I had this little blurb.
I had like a two-minute segment where I explained why I'm voting for Trump.
And I was included in that.
And I got on Twitter and was tweeting about that.
I tweeted a lot of controversial stuff.
And a lot of people on campus were saying, we'll kill you.
I better not see you on Commonwealth Avenue.
I'm going to fuck you up and stuff like that.
Because I was in that thing and then I was tweeting all this stuff.
And so people found my Twitter and they were like threatening to kill me or beat me up.
And that got picked up by Campus Reform.
Campus Reform did a story about it, about all the death threats I was getting.
And then Young Americans for Liberty approached me.
I forget the guy's name, but the Young Americans for Liberty at a nearby campus reached out to me and they said, hey, we want to set up a debate with you and one of the people that disagrees with you on Twitter.
And I said, yeah, let's do it.
And he goes, okay, I'll just start DMing some of the people that are arguing with you and we'll set up an event.
I said, okay.
And so he gets back to me a week later and he's like, well, we couldn't find anybody.
Nobody wants to debate you.
I was like, oh, that's a real shame.
Well, if that changes, let me know.
I mean, I'll debate anybody.
Then he contacts one last person and it was this guy, Jake Brewer.
I think that's his name.
He was the president of student government at Boston University.
He was literally the president of the student council or student government, whatever.
And he was down to do it.
He wore a beanie, he had glasses, he was like a Marxist or whatever.
And so the debate was set up.
They rented a room, this big auditorium, and they advertised it everywhere.
They said, you know, Student Body President vs. Nick Fuentes.
And the debate is, do you vote for Trump or do you vote for Hillary Clinton?
It's like 300 people came to this, like hundreds of people came to this debate.
I was a nobody!
I was just a freshman, relatively unknown.
I just became known because I was wearing my hat all around campus.
And because of my tweets and because I was in BU today.
And so, yeah, so we had the debate.
It was streamed on Periscope.
All my family watched it, like my whole family, all my family friends watched and they were texting me, you did great Nicholas!
All that, and we did the debate.
It was very formal.
Then we did a Q&A, I think, from the audience.
Like I said, Cassie Dillon livestreamed it, and she comes up to me, and I don't think I had met her.
I think she had talked to me briefly on Facebook before, but she comes up to me, and she's like, you did amazing!
She hugs me.
She goes, you did amazing!
Oh my gosh, that was the best thing I ever saw!
Do you want to do an interview with me real quick?
And we do an interview on Periscope.
And she tells me, oh you got all these job offers, Shapiro watched it, Milo watched it, everybody watched it, we gotta stay in touch, I gotta get your number, blah blah blah.
And so that's how I got to know Cassie Dillon.
And then she was approached by Joe Seals at Right Side Broadcasting Network And Joe Seals asked her to do a show on their network, and she accepted, and she had a show with Will Nardi called Raised Right, because Will Nardi was a local Yale guy.
I think he was at Northeastern or something.
So they had their show, and I was on her show a couple times, and then she put the word into Joe, and she said, you gotta give Nick Fuentes a show.
This kid's great.
And he did, and the rest is history.
The show is called America First.
It debuted just a few months later, February 7th, I think, 2017.
And the rest is history.
There it was on RSVN.
And then, you know, it goes on from there.
Then it's a long and storied career after that.
But, yeah, that was five, can you believe it?
Five years ago.
And it feels like, you know, some people say, wow, that was five years ago?
Well, it feels like, it definitely feels, it feels like a hundred years ago, but... Yeah.
Yeah, those were good times.
Anyway, so I don't know if that's real Zoomer dev, but thanks, I appreciate that.
Arizona Doppelgroi versus can't wait for winter so I can wear all 11 pieces of my AF merch in one outfit.
Yeah, gotta layer up.
Gotta get the AF layers going.
Call me Meta says let the record show that I have been called Meta since I started my RuneScape account in 2008.
Fuck Mark Zuckerberg.
unidentified
Wow.
nick fuentes
Arizona says Web 3.0 and finally we can say nigga and faggot whenever we want.
What's Web 3?
I don't know what that is.
Beardson something says, perhaps what sucks most about you being banned from Twitter is that you don't get to do nearly as many of your e-drama rants about Twitter that you used to sometimes do after the announcements and before the stories.
Those were my favorite.
I know!
I miss it so much.
I miss Twitter.
I can't even tell you how much I miss it.
It's so miserable not being on there.
I need to post.
I NEED to post 280 character messages.
unidentified
It's... It's been one of the hardest things.
nick fuentes
Being put on the no-fly list has been really tough.
Having my money taken has been tough.
Losing friends.
I've lost a lot, and it's been hard.
But losing Twitter, that's the hardest thing.
That's the worst thing they ever did to me.
I would do anything to get it back.
I wouldn't do anything, but I would do a lot to get it back.
I mean, I would pay money, I don't know who I gotta call, but I want my Twitter back.
I want my followers back.
I want my check mark.
I want my Twitter account back, dammit!
unidentified
I want my group chats.
I want my dopamine.
nick fuentes
I want my content.
Oh, man.
What I would give to be back on Twitter.
That's like my element.
That's like taking a sailor off the seas.
It's like taking a canvas away from an artist, or better yet, his hands to paint.
It's the worst thing that ever happened to me, ever, in my whole life.
Worst thing ever!
And I didn't even really react to it when it happened.
I didn't cry, and it didn't even really bother me at the time, but it just slowly sank in.
Despair, dread, misery.
I'll never forget it.
As long as I live, I'll never forget it.
That whole morning.
I went in the shower.
I scroll up.
And then it's not scrolling up, and I'm like, and I knew, and I knew!
And I go, is Twitter down right now?
I Google, is Twitter down right now?
And no, it's not.
And then I, twitter.com slash Nick J. Fuentes, account suspended.
And then Jaden McNeil fist bumps me.
Fist bumps me.
I mean, my whole world just came caving in on itself.
My whole world comes crumbling down.
My empire of dust.
And Jaden says, sorry about that, bro.
Fist-pound me.
Hey man, it's okay.
Fist bump.
Fist bump.
You get your fist out of my face.
unidentified
I don't even want to look at you!
nick fuentes
I don't even want to see you!
My Twitter account is gone and you give me a paltry fist bump?
unidentified
Ugh!
nick fuentes
It's not his fault.
It's not his fault.
I mean, I shouldn't blame him.
I'm mad at Twitter.
I can't put the blame on him.
But yeah, I wanted to jump out the window.
I wanted to open up the window and fucking throw myself out.
No more.
unidentified
No more Twitter.
No more mentions.
No more likes.
nick fuentes
No more group chats.
No more messages.
unidentified
No more block lists.
No more check mark.
nick fuentes
No more retweets.
No more, congratulations sir, you made it to Friday!
unidentified
No more Twitter!
nick fuentes
I can't.
I just can't, man.
It's not the same.
unidentified
It's not the same.
nick fuentes
We'll never be the same.
I'll never be the same.
I'm changed.
It's like seeing someone die in front of you.
You're not the same after that.
unidentified
You know?
nick fuentes
I will never get over it.
I will never, ever, ever get over it.
unidentified
As long as I live, I'll never, I'll never overcome that.
nick fuentes
I need it back.
I need it, listen, I need it back.
I need my Twitter account back.
You gotta give it back to me!
unidentified
You have to give it back to me!
nick fuentes
I mean, I've been able to go on without it, but I'm not happy about it.
It's like, it's like the ring in Lord of the Rings, you know?
What I would give to just tweet one more time what I would give is get another 10,000 followers Now I'm with the rest of you I'm on telegram and I have to lurk behind some Anonymous account with no profile picture and no followers and
Oh my gosh.
unidentified
Just... Should have just killed me.
nick fuentes
Should have just put me out of my misery.
Rather than take my Twitter, my tens of millions of impressions.
unidentified
This is why I drink.
Thank you.
nick fuentes
This is why I drink water.
But yeah, yeah, I do.
I miss it.
I remember people from high school used to shit talk me and I'd retweet them and it'd get a thousand likes and they would just get totally blown out.
unidentified
Ugh.
nick fuentes
Name-searching myself, blocking everybody that talks shit about me.
The ratio, the replies, the quote tweets.
Man.
Anyway, yeah, I know.
I know.
unidentified
I know.
nick fuentes
Not to keep going on and on about it, but I miss it too.
Worst day of my life.
Worst day of my life.
And then Optics Respector took me to the WORST Mexican restaurant I've ever been to.
It wasn't that bad, but it wasn't good either.
Yeah, so that was quite the day.
And then my dad, my dad, he was down there too.
It was during White Boy Summer and so we're driving to lunch, me, Jade, and my dad.
We're going to meet Optics Spectre, a few other people, and I'm like, I'm trying to be courteous and polite because I'm driving and You know, people are, my dad's talking to me and I'm trying to be courteous and not be on my phone even though I need to be.
I mean, I absolutely need to be because I just got banned from Twitter.
So my phone's blowing up.
People are texting me, calling me, you name it.
Every social media, everybody's blowing me up.
And so I'm being courteous and like not being on my phone.
I think it's impolite.
So I'm driving and my dad takes a phone call.
And I'm like, are you kidding me?
I just got banned from Twitter.
I'm not answering my phone to be courteous to you.
And then he picks up the phone.
unidentified
He's like on a phone call the whole way while we're driving to the restaurant.
nick fuentes
Such a typical, such a typical move.
He does that.
I don't get it.
He's a big fubber.
You know, fubbing when you phone snub somebody.
I never do that, to my own detriment.
I hate taking out my phone when I'm with people, but my dad does that a lot.
And I don't get it, because he used to be very strict about that.
No phones at the dinner table.
And now, sometimes I'll be talking to him, and he'll just take his phone out and start texting, and then not hear what I'm saying.
And I'm like, okay, thank you.
unidentified
So, yeah, that was awesome, but...
nick fuentes
Yeah, awful day.
The fish bump.
The Mexican restaurant.
My dad taking the call.
It never ends.
Ploobly says, okay, hear me out.
I know you've had some issues.
Maybe it's time to reach out.
Owen Benjamin on CozyTV.
Yeah, that's never gonna happen.
You're very funny.
He said many hurtful things, but maybe you guys could keep your distance.
unidentified
I'm sure if you came to him and his guys and offered, he'd consider it.
nick fuentes
What is the matter with you?
He said some hurtful things.
He said disgraceful things about my mom, about my dad, about my sister.
He said he would kill me.
He said he would kill my family.
I know he said some hurtful things.
Saying a hurtful thing is saying, like, you're not funny and you're gay and Jewish.
Saying I'm gonna kill you and your family and your dad's Jewish and your mom's this and that's definitely crossing the line.
So, and he has his own platform.
He's on Unauthorized with Vox Dei.
So, you know.
We need to start unifying.
It's always on me.
People can do stuff like that to me, but the onus is on me to unify.
The guy's insane.
Not only that, but the guy's insane.
So, I mean, why don't you leave the strategizing to me?
People always have the next best idea of what we need to do.
We need to start unifying.
Okay, go and live on his compound then.
Go and live on his fuckin' Beartopia Ranch.
Okay?
You wanna unify?
Why don't you donate to Richard Spencer's Legal Fund and go to a pool party, TRS, and go live on the Beartopia Jonestown compound.
unidentified
Okay?
nick fuentes
Unifier, okay?
Great unifier if you're so interested in that.
Ridiculous.
Dyson says, have you seen Year Million on Disney Plus?
It explores what it's like to be human a million years from now.
It's narrated by Morpheus.
It explores the evolution of metaverse, uploading our consciousness to the cloud, living in a computer.
Pretty interesting if you want to see how far the rabbit hole goes.
No, I haven't seen that.
Humongous Blungus says people say America isn't like the dictatorial third world.
Just look at the state of our populace.
This is a population of brutish consumers ruled by big tech and it's coming to your area.
That's great.
Really, really fresh.
Baguette Gropers says, when it comes to big tech, prepare for the worst.
Hope for the biggest solar flare in the past 10,000 years to hit us within the next five years.
That's really well written.
Incel George Floyd says, rolling COVID lockdowns and the only way you can see your family is on the Facebook metaverse.
Wow, again, another really insightful take.
Esoteric Drifter says, don't know if you got the chance to check out the opening statements of Charlottesville trial, but have to wish those guys luck.
I don't.
Be interesting to see how the self-representation works out.
Was wild.
Yeah, I listened to it for like 15 minutes.
I listened to Chris Cantwell's opening statement for like 15 minutes, and then I just couldn't take it anymore.
I was like, why would I listen to this when I could be not listening to this?
Because this is awful.
I was like, oh, wait a second.
I really don't want this or need this in my life.
Because that guy's insane.
He's another one.
Another off the gooper.
But, yeah, I don't really feel too bad.
I mean, what's happening to them isn't fair.
I'm not saying it's fair.
It's horrible.
But they would not be wishing me well if I were in the same situation.
So, I don't wish him any luck.
Blue Ridge Group versus White Pill.
Researchers spent half their time programming content-neutral AIs from identifying trannies as men, black people as guerrillas, and Chadbots from denying the Holocaust.
Tay Tu when?
Jack Bligsby says, let's be real, all the real brave first responders in New York City died of asbestos poisoning and cancer five to nine years after 9-11 when the buildings owned by Larry Silverstein were blown up.
Christ is King.
unidentified
Yeah, that's great.
nick fuentes
General Cavies says, Nick, in regards to EMF, try looking at Lamb's clothing.
It has a Faraday cage lining.
Also look up scientists Royal Rifle and Stanley Meyer.
They have made discoveries that were suppressed and I believe their technologies has been refit for evil purposes.
2D Stan's machine split H2O at same frequency as 5G.
Rife's tech would kill Big Pharma.
unidentified
Oh yeah?
Interesting.
nick fuentes
Afghan refugees says, hey, King, thoughts on comically large hats in height and width to identify true plan trusters once the compound is created?
Love the show.
It's a good idea.
Epic Guy says, you're like Darth Vader.
You have to be made constantly uncomfortable to be on top of your game.
You know, I love when I say things, and then you repeat those things back to me.
That's really beneficial for everybody.
When I say something, and everyone knows I say it, and then you just repeat it back to me.
Oh, I'm like Darth Vader?
And yeah, I think I said that.
I think I've said that many times.
I think I've made that observation many times.
And I know that I did, and you heard that from me, and now you're repeating it back to me like it's your own observation.
I mean, what the fuck is that?
Desert Fox says, Every show is a good show, Nick.
Thank you and Zoomer Dev for building a great platform.
It's a big white pill in an otherwise shitty year.
I agree.
Thanks.
Marcin Olsz's metaverse tech seems cool but cannot be divorced from context of further virus and climate lockdowns.
Stay home and see friends and family virtually.
Wish technology opened new frontiers instead of keeping people inside.
Thanks and God bless.
True.
Esoteric Drifter says Citizens United was grassroots boomer right-wingers trying to get their video on giant corporation streaming services.
The control of the system is so great the little guy was painted as a corporation.
Based Koobs as I'm with you on keeping the family together.
Family is everything.
Mexicans don't move out until they're married.
Yeah, same with Italians.
That's how it should be.
Olden Groy versus went to your city.
Extremely based.
No blacks in the downtown area compared to my own.
What is this?
A.I.s was decent.
Got pep.
Oh, Al's.
Al's.
Al's was decent.
Got peppers by mistake.
So slightly underwhelming.
Decent.
unidentified
Listen, Al's Beef is phenomenal.
nick fuentes
Al's Beef, Portillo's, the chains are very good.
I'm surprised you didn't see any blacks in downtown.
They seem to be all over the place lately.
But yeah, compared to other cities maybe not so much.
There's not as many homeless in Chicago.
You would really be surprised.
Because you go to Boston, D.C., Miami, Tampa, L.A., Dallas, Austin, Houston.
You go any...Vegas, Denver.
There's homeless everywhere in like every major city.
But in Chicago you really don't see that much of it.
They're under some bridges, but they're not like they are in D.C.
In D.C.
they're just hanging out everywhere and they're feral.
Not like Chicago.
Chicago they're pretty rare Relatively speaking so it's a relatively clean city.
I'm surprised you didn't see a lot of blacks though.
Like I said cuz lately they've been downtown Wiling out but Yeah, I don't know what you mean Al's was underwhelming I don't know you're talking about Ridiculous TVs is how do I deal with rejection from a girl?
I don't know.
It's never happened to me I So it's a tough one.
It's a tough one.
You just gotta... I don't know.
You're asking the wrong person.
You're asking the wrong person.
I don't think I've ever... Well, I asked a girl out a few times and every time it worked.
So...
And by the way before people say yeah, I know it's so by the way, whatever It's like happened twice, okay the delegate dance A couple of times for prom and then one one other time.
Okay one other time and that was it And Yeah, in every case they were like sure it didn't go super well any of the times because I was very like uncomfortable I was very like Embarrassed.
Kind of mortified.
Not mortified because it's like, oh no, it's a girl!
It was more like, I'm embarrassed that I'm a part of this.
Like, I'm embarrassed that I'm party to this, this, you know, display.
I remember the delegate day.
I don't know, I'm not gonna get into that.
But I was just like, I was mortified.
unidentified
And same with all the other times, so.
nick fuentes
Anyway, so I don't know.
I don't know.
I mean, I've experienced the sort of unrequited crush or affection or something.
But honestly, you just gotta get over it.
I know that's not great advice, but...
There's no, with a lot of things, there's no secret, there's no life hack, you just, you know, you just have to cope with it.
You just have to find ways to cope.
So, just don't think about it.
Literally, just don't think about it.
There are a lot of things in this life that you just can't think about.
Because if you did, you would be miserable and paralyzed and unable to go on.
So, there's some things in life you just can't dwell too much on or, you know, you will not, you're going to be dysfunctional, so.
I would just try to distract yourself, throw yourself into your work, do something else.
Because things like that, whoops, they feel bad and if you dwell too much, if you fall into this sort of negative feedback loop, this kind of bad pattern of thinking, it's inescapable.
And it reinforces negativity, it reinforces dysfunctional behaviors.
It's not good.
And all you have to do is just literally just stop thinking about it.
Out of sight, out of mind.
Look the other way.
Just try your best to distract yourself with something else.
Maybe ask another girl out.
Or you go to work.
Do something else.
But you've got to take your mind off it.
Because the more you think about it, it's just going to feel bad.
It's just gonna feel bad.
And it could go on for a long time, so... Tyler Venturis is your monologue just now on family and the importance of community is what makes your show one-of-a-kind.
I have many friends trying to recreate the college experience.
Long after it's over, it isn't good for them financially or spiritually.
And it just doesn't even work.
It's a cope.
Everybody knows that.
It's all masking, so...
It's not good in any way.
Beardson says, I think whether you should live with your parents depends on how you and your parents are.
For me, it's difficult to live with them because I always feel pressured and overcared for, as if I am a child.
For you, it might be different because you just have a different relationship with your parents.
Yeah, I agree.
Because some parents, you know, there's a lot of dysfunction.
And that's what the devil does is he inverts things that are holy.
And I've noticed that even in my life.
is a sacred thing shared between a husband and wife united through God.
It becomes very clear that premarital fornication is a satanic sacrament and an affront against God the Father.
Very true.
And that's what the devil does is he inverts things that are holy.
And I've noticed that even in my life.
There are things that are like there's parallels.
And you notice this in your life.
You don't have to think very hard, but that's what the devil does is he inverts, he takes things that are biblical, takes things that are sacramental, and he inverts them and twists them, like you said.
And you get the sort of evil inverse of what you're told to do in the Bible.
The world is full of things like this.
So, that's what the devil does.
Very, very important to be cognizant of that.
Yeah, in that case, that's not good, you know?
think my parents are more liberal than I am on personal things.
My dad thinks I should have sex before marriage and that I'm limiting myself by trying to find a girl in the church.
Yeah, in that case, that's not good, you know?
So you're right.
I mean, again, all this goes without saying that in the modern day, it's not what it used to be.
So, what I mean to say is, Gen X, Boomers, they may not have your best interest in mind because they grew up very corrupt.
MonkeyRespector says, Hey Nick, what you described with multi-generational households is exactly what I'm doing.
Oh really?
That's so interesting.
I've been living with my parents for three years since getting a decent job after school.
I've been saving all my money, investing in crypto, and soon hope to buy a home.
Better than being alone and broke.
Better than being alone and broke.
That's great.
Congratulations.
Tyler says, Moving back home with my parents after college was an adjustment.
Yeah, it's great.
Really made me think of how sad it is that so many people have a similar psychosis for the rest of their lives until the TV tells them they don't need the mask anymore.
unidentified
Great.
nick fuentes
And Morgan Trump says, Today overheard a customer discussing with one of my employees that she's so accustomed to wearing a mask that she now feels dirty and gross being out in public without one.
Really made me think of how sad it is that so many people have a similar psychosis for the rest of their lives until the TV tells them they don't need the mask anymore.
Yeah, do you feel that way?
Thanks for the super chat.
That's so true.
I'm crying.
I'm really... I was really sad about all that.
Polly Exit says, Any plans to buy an Oculus VR headset for the sake of metaverse research?
Maybe.
Jesse says, I need to share that super chat ram with my 11 year old son.
I know it's not normally available, but please, please find a way.
The replays are available every night.
You're breaking my heart in the best way.
So much truth in one rant.
07's king.
Well, thanks a lot, man.
I'm glad you liked the rant.
I don't know what you mean, though.
The replays are available every night, so... And we post the clips on Banned Video and on GabTV.
Like, it's all out there.
I don't know what you're talking about.
The content's always available online, but I appreciate that.
Smile League the Feds says, your lost dreams are like burning the Library of Alexandria.
Yeah, very true.
unidentified
D.B.
nick fuentes
Networks says, Yo Nikki, it's me Joe the Boomer.
Can I get a Mr. House the Boomer check?
Did you ever finish New Vegas?
Do you get the Mr. House reference?
Yeah, I finished it.
I get the reference.
unidentified
I see it.
nick fuentes
Nate Smokes says, That rant about college and... Thank you.
That rant really hit.
Honestly got me thinking into looking towards getting an online degree instead of moving out next semester.
There you go.
Overmance says, I found out about you last year so I tried googling articles about you and I stumbled across this Vice article written by Will Nardi where he explains the origin story of Nick Fuentes.
That article becomes sacred in the future.
I don't know about sacred, but...
Yeah, it'll be something.
Tyler says, exact quote from the Vice article about the night from Will Nardi.
I didn't go, but Cassie called me the next day to tell me she had seen the next rising star in the Republican Party.
Very funny.
Hicks says, I literally farted like 12 times this morning.
Okay, Tyler says, Trump's first executive order...
2025 is forcing Twitter to reinstate your Twitter.
Can see him with his big fat sharpie and his Richter scale signature holding it up to the press.
Yeah, OpticRespector says you remember the day you were banned so vividly you ordered the worst thing against my suggestion.
I don't think you suggested otherwise but... but whatever bro.
I remember it too.
I remember it well.
I remember we had to walk around the whole restaurant in the rain because we parked behind and we had to walk on those on those stones across the patio and I remember everything about it.
unidentified
I remember the whole day vividly.
nick fuentes
Suburbs Ninja says it's 2037 a newly elected president.
These are my favorite.
These are my fucking favorite.
Newly elected president Fuentes has nationalized all social media companies and retroactively reinstated former three-term president.
Oh, there it is.
That's funny.
Former president Donald Trump's Twitter account as well as his own and all of his supporters as the sun rises over 50th border wall.
A happy groyper tweets the n-word.
All is right with the world.
Yeah, that's really so fucking funny, dude.
That's so hilarious.
What a novel concept.
Mechazol Groyper says Groyper is not like Hydra.
Groypers are everywhere.
Yeah, that's that's or it is a lot like Hydra.
Yeah, it's very great Marvel reference.
Arse Blaster says Milo shouted out AF.
unidentified
Milo shouted out AF on Church of Militant.
nick fuentes
Said something like it's indispensable but needs to somehow attract women.
You like him?
I think he's sort of gay.
I do like him actually.
I do.
I didn't trust him at first.
I still don't really trust him, honestly, but I think he is trustworthy.
But I don't trust anybody.
But he's a brilliant guy, and I think that his conversion is sincere.
I mean, he's always been Catholic, but I think his coming to practice the faith, I think that's sincere.
to the extent that I can see.
So, yeah, I do like him.
I think he's sincere.
He's the flawed person, as we all are, but, you know, he really surprised me, because I've known him for a couple of years now, and I was very, very skeptical and very hesitant at first, but the more I've gotten to know him, the better he seems, but I'm not letting my guard down the better he seems, but I'm not letting my guard down anytime soon, don't Don't get me wrong, but yeah, I appreciate his kind words, and he's doing some good work at Church Militant.
Church Militant's very good.
Rocking chairs, his thoughts on Pizza Party, Ben?
Internet legend.
Love the guy.
Desert Fox says D. Thank you.
All right.
Beardson says, by the way, I'm the same person as Beardson Smith.
I just think it's really funny that there's someone actually named Beardson.
So I create these names so I express my fascination.
This time I wanted to see what you do if you can't pronounce the last name.
There you go.
And Morton Trump says, pooh pooh pee pee.
Good night, Nick.
Hey, good night, buddy.
Thanks.
Okay, all right.
That's gonna do it for me tonight.
There's your two-hour, 20-minute show.
They just get a little bit monotonous towards the end.
Hey, great rant, huh?
Here's what I think.
Here's what I'm doing.
unidentified
Oh my God, that's great.
Okay.
All right, okay.
nick fuentes
All right.
Thank you.
No, I appreciate the super chats.
It's just my nose starts to itch.
I get congested.
I'm getting a little sweaty.
I'm getting a little antsy.
I want to walk around.
I want to do stuff.
You know, I want to get up.
I want to stretch my legs.
Okay, you can't take it personally, but you're keeping me here now.
Well, I really did that because I spent like 45 minutes on two superchats, but it's not really your fault.
Okay, so that's it.
Remember to follow me on this channel, okay?
Click the follow button, follow me on Gavin Telegram, check out the site, nicholasjfwences.com.
I'm on the air Monday through Friday, 8 o'clock Central, 9 o'clock Eastern Standard Time on cozy.tv.
I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes.
As always, thanks for watching.
Thanks to our Super Chatters subscribers, everybody that watches the show.
We love you.
I will see you tomorrow.
Casual Friday.
Until then, have a great rest of your evening.
unidentified
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo.
It's going to be only America first.
America first.
The American people will come first once again.
America First!
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